Joke Collection Website - Cold jokes - "Summer is hot, winter is cold, and spring will not die. What will my heart do?

"Summer is hot, winter is cold, and spring will not die. What will my heart do?

This word comes from Huanxisha written by a famous scholar in the Song Dynasty.

From: Around the Sand written by Song Dynasty.

Original text:

It is hot in summer and cold in winter. Spring will not kill my heart, my heart will follow one's inclinations.

Translation:

Summer is extremely hot, winter is extremely cold, and I will not give up when spring comes. The place I yearn for is the place where I will succeed.

Extended data:

Creative background:

Wen's poetic thoughts are rich in content, and he has extensive contact and in-depth thinking on war, love, life, history, politics and female themes. Moreover, his artistic expression techniques are flexible and diverse, including exquisite and tireless descriptions, as well as epigrams with lofty style and fresh language, and his writing style is beautiful, which is highly respected by contemporary people.

From the aspect of poetic style, he is best at Yuefu poetry and near-body rhythm. In Qing Dynasty, He Gu reinterpreted the couple. His father died and his son succeeded to the throne, which eventually became Wen Feiqing's Poems.

There are about one-sixth Yuefu poems in Wen's poetry collection, which are colorful and write more boudoir banquets. Among his Yuefu poems, his high achievements are mainly poems about history and homesickness, love and scenery (including frontier fortress trips), but there are also masterpieces about banquets and music.

Wen's Yuefu poems satirize the current disadvantages with historical events, which is the inheritance of the new Yuefu. At the same time, there have been great developments and changes. The theme focuses on amorous feelings, the image tends to be sad, the artistic conception tends to be hazy, and the technique is graceful and tortuous, showing a style similar to that of ci. Wen Tingyun was an important town among Yuefu poets in the Tang Dynasty, and some researchers even called him, Li Bai, Du Fu and Bai Juyi as the four Yuefu poets in the Tang Dynasty.