Joke Collection Website - Talk about mood - What are the poems that express willingness to spend a lifetime with someone?

What are the poems that express willingness to spend a lifetime with someone?

1, life and death are broad, Zi Cheng said. Hold your hand and grow old with your son. -from the pre-Qin Dynasty: The Book of Songs and the Wind Drum.

Vernacular interpretation: I made a promise with you when I live and die. Hold your hand and grow old with your son.

2, the belt is getting wider and wider, and I will never regret it, which will make people haggard for Iraq. -From Song Dynasty: Liu Yong's "Liang Zhu, Living in a Dangerous Building"

Interpretation of vernacular Chinese: I am getting thinner and thinner, and I don't feel guilty. I'd rather languish for you.

3. Ugh, I want to know you, and I will live a long life. I long to know you, long live, this heart will never fade. Unless the towering mountains disappear, unless the raging rivers dry up. Unless thunder rolls in the cold winter, unless it snows heavily in the hot summer, unless heaven and earth meet and connect, I dare to abandon my feelings for you until such a thing happens! —— From the Han Dynasty: Anonymous "Folk Songs in Han Yuefu"

Explain in vernacular Chinese: Oh, my God! I am eager to know you and cherish you, and my heart will never fade. Unless the majestic mountains disappear, unless the raging rivers dry up. Unless thunder is rolling in the cold winter, unless it snows heavily in the hot summer, and unless heaven and earth intersect, I dare to abandon my affection for you until all this happens!

4, pity for others, there is no need to get married. I am full of thinking that if I marry a person with a heart, I can love each other and be happy forever. -From the Han Dynasty: Zhuo Wenjun's "White-headed Song"

Interpretation of vernacular Chinese: I resolutely left home and flew away with you, unlike ordinary girls who cry sadly. I hope to marry a loyal man, love and be happy forever.

5, we hope to fly in the sky, two birds grow together on the ground with a new wing, two branches of a tree ... —— From the Tang Dynasty: Bai Juyi's Song of Eternal Sorrow.

Interpretation in the vernacular: In the sky, I wish to be a bird that flies with me, and in the earth, I wish to be a branch.