1. When flowers bloom, they can face the sun; when they fall, they are covered with moss. ——"Sighing the Sunflower" by Dai Shulun of the Tang Dynasty. Vernacular interpretation: It can face the sun when it blooms, and it can face the moss when it falls.
2. Learn to watch the hibiscus trees quietly in the mountains, and fold the dew sunflowers in the clear house of Panasonic. ——"Jiyu Wangchuanzhuang Works" by Wang Wei of the Tang Dynasty. Vernacular interpretation: The mountains are clean and the dew and sunflowers under the pine trees are free from the smell of meat.
3. Kuihuo leans towards the sun, and its physical properties cannot be taken away. ——"Five Hundred Words of Empathy from Beijing to Fengxian County" by Du Fu of the Tang Dynasty. Vernacular interpretation: The leaves of the sunflower always face the sun, which shows that the properties of the substance itself cannot be easily changed.
4. The sunflowers in the green garden are waiting for the morning dew. ——"Long Song Xing" Han Yuefu. Vernacular interpretation: The sunflowers in the yard are still green, soaring under the clear morning dew.
5. There are no catkins blowing up due to the wind, only sunflowers leaning toward the sun. ——"Early Summer in Guesthouse" by Sima Guang of the Song Dynasty. Vernacular interpretation: catkins are fluttering in the wind, but only sunflowers are facing the sun.