Am I imprisoning you or are you occupying me? You broke into my heart. Closing the door and twisting the lock is a poem written by Su Wenwan, a character in "The Besieged City".
In the book, this poem was copied on a folding fan by her suitor Wang Erkai with purple ink pen. Su Wenwan took out a poem and asked everyone to comment on whether it was well written. Fang Hongjian did not understand. , told the truth, Su Wenwan explained that it was a copycat song. The complete sentence is Shall I imprison you? Or do you dominate me? You broke into my heart, closed the door and twisted the lock. Lost the key in the lock, it was me, maybe you. I can't open the door from now on, forever, you are locked in my heart.
Character introduction:
Su Wenwan is an important character in Qian Zhongshu's novel "The Besieged City". Su Wenwan eventually married Cao Yuanlang.
First of all, Su Wenwan has long been included in the ranks of older young women; secondly, Fang Hongjian's failure made her urgently need to rebuild her self-confidence; thirdly, Cao Yuanlang was finally able to write two lines of "pregnant women's belly trembles and clings to the sky". Poetry barely meets the requirements of a "female poet". In a word, Su Wenwan is a scheming, hypocritical and pretentious lady. This further explains the symbol of "siege".
After reading 1 Reflections on Three-body Three
This is a very good-looking science fiction novel, which gives me a different