Joke Collection Website - Talk about mood - Birds return to their nests?

Birds return to their nests?

, "journey"

Tang Dynasty: Zhang Ji

When traveling abroad, it is difficult to go, and the parking policy is at the door. No one in the desolate city is covered with frost,

Wildfire severely burned the bridge. Cold insects go into holes, birds return to their nests, and servants ask me who will go.

Interpretation of vernacular:

It is difficult for guests who are drifting away to leave, and the convergence strategy of stopping at the door. There is no frost in the deserted city, but the bridge can't be burned in the wild. The cold bug got into the ground and the bird returned to its nest. The servant asked me who was leaving.

2. "Give a grain monk"

Tang Dynasty: Du Xunhe

I said that I had to stop eating because I was sick. My original intention was not to seek longevity. Only preaching to the people,

No pilgrims go to the meditation room. Woodbirds came home late in the rain, and rock apes were busy picking up rubber after frost.

Interpretation of vernacular:

When I said I didn't eat whole grains because I was sick, I didn't mean to live forever. It's just that there are ways to preach and teach, and there are no pilgrims in the meditation room. In the rain, the woodbirds returned to their nests very late. After the frost, the rock apes were busy picking acorns.

3. "Sentence"

Tang Dynasty: Chen Fu

A rain washes away the summer heat, and every family gets cold early. The yellow bird is anxious to return to its nest, but the cold cow is late.

Thousands of songs, you can get two or three. In the Qing Dynasty, I didn't become a dragon-boarding guest, but only combed the green nunnery next to the thatched cottage.

Interpretation of vernacular:

A rain washes away the summer heat, and all generations are born early and cool. The yellow bird is anxious to return to its nest, but the cold cow is late. I counted hundreds of songs before I got two triplets. In Qing dynasty, I didn't stay as a guest, but combed the side of the thatched cottage between the temples.