1. Poetry: I am born with talents that will be useful, and I will come back after all my money has been spent.
From: "Going into Wine" by Li Bai of the Tang Dynasty
Interpretation: God has created my talents, so they must be useful, and I can get them again even after spending a thousand taels of gold.
2. Verse: Stay firm on the green hills and never let go; your roots are still in the broken rocks.
From: "Bamboo and Stone" by Zheng Xie of the Qing Dynasty
Interpretation: Bamboo grasps the green mountains without letting go at all, and its roots are firmly rooted in the cracks of the rocks.
3. Poetry: Thousands of hammers carved out the deep mountains, and the fire burned them as if nothing happened.
From: "Ode of Lime" by Yu Qian of the Ming Dynasty
Interpretation: Stones quarried from deep mountains after thousands of hammers treat the burning of raging fire as a very ordinary thing. thing.
4. Verse: Although it is hard to scrounge thousands of pounds, you will only get gold after blowing all the sand.
From: "Lang Tao Sha·Eight" by Liu Yuxi in the Tang Dynasty
Interpretation: After thousands of filtrations and countless hardships, only the mud can finally be washed out The sand gets sparkling gold.
5. Poetry: The crouching dragon and the leaping horse end in the loess, and people and things are still lonely.
From: "Ge Night" by Du Fu in the Tang Dynasty
Interpretation: Historical figures like Zhuge Liang and Gongsun Shu (whether wise or foolish) will eventually end up in the loess; what I see in front of me What does this loneliness (referring to outings and comfort between relatives) mean?