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What are some poems or famous quotes about cows?

Poems or famous sayings about cows:

Cattle and sheep are invisible to the wind and grass. ——The Song Dynasty during the Northern and Southern Dynasties, edited by Guo Maoqian in "Collection of Yuefu Poems·Chile Song"

It is like filling the ox head with charcoal. ——Bai Juyi of the Tang Dynasty, "The Charcoal Seller"

There are hundreds of hectares of fields, thousands of pavilions and thousands of hooves of cattle and sheep. ——Pu Songling, Qing Dynasty, "Strange Stories from a Chinese Studio·Promoting Weaving"

He has a cold eyebrow and points his finger at a thousand men, but he bows his head and is willing to be a Ruzi Niu. ——Lu Xun, Republic of China

Pure separation is a cow. ——The State of Lu in the late Spring and Autumn Period Zuo Qiuming's "Zuo Zhuan·The Fifth Year of Duke Zhao"

The neighbor in the east killed the cow. ——The Western Han Dynasty, Dai De and his nephew Dai Sheng, "Book of Rites·Fang Ji"

Niu said it was too lao. ——"Book of Rites of Dada·Zengzi Tianyuan"

I am like a cow, eating grass and squeezing out milk and blood. —— Lu Xun of the Republic of China

The old man also knows that the sunset is late, so he does not need to raise his whip to get up: Praise that although the old man is old, he can still exert his remaining energy and contribute to society.

A cow that refuses to drink water but is forced to press its head: a metaphor for forcing a person to do something they don’t want to do.

An ox does not know how to bend its horns, and a horse does not know how long its face is: it is a metaphor for people’s lack of self-knowledge.

A calf chases a rabbit but cannot use its strength: it refers to being restricted by certain conditions and cannot use even its strength. Not coming out.

Oxen plowing the fields and horses eating the grain: a metaphor for unfair treatment, those who suffer suffer hardship, and those who enjoy happiness enjoy happiness.

An ox has the strength of a thousand catties, but a man has a way to defeat an ox: It is a metaphor that no matter how strong the opponent is, he will find a way to subdue it.

An ox tying a horse, the two are exhausted: one is fast and the other is slow, holding each other back. It means that it is difficult to cooperate in doing things. Set: refers to the set of cars.

A bull's head is not the same as the horse's mouth: a metaphor for talking nonsense, the two have nothing to do with each other.

Bullshit is not for boasting, and trains are not for push: It means not to make big claims out of thin air, but to show your true ability.