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What are the poems of poverty?

David Tao

Northern Song Dynasty? mei yao chen

Exhausted workers dug and dug all day and dug out the soil in front of the house, but there was not a tile in their own house.

A rich man lives in a tile-roofed building without touching mud.

It's bold to spend money lavishly, and the family doesn't know much about it.

Chrysanthemum morifolium is not beautiful when it is old, and porridge and wine are often recorded in the whole family.

The autumn wind breaks the thatched cottage by Du Fu, a poet in Tang Dynasty

I have no place to eat, and it is difficult to break the inkstone. Famous sayings of poverty

Shi's "The Second Rhyme: It has rained for a long time in Kong Yiji". Eating broken inkstones: eating by breaking inkstones means living by writing. Second: Recently. I have no land or money in my life. I only live on a broken inkstone, but recently even the broken inkstone has dried up and I can't grind ink. The author has never set foot in industry in his life, and only makes a living by writing poems and articles. Later, he was demoted again and again, and the situation was even more difficult. He is so depressed that he can't even write poems and articles. This is what the author wants to talk about, but it is expressed in symbolic language, such as "the inkstone has been eaten bad" and "the inkstone has been worn bad", which gives abstract ideas a vivid and tangible image. This writing method can give us useful enlightenment. Can be used to describe the plight of frustrated intellectuals.

Su Shi, a writer in the Northern Song Dynasty, "The Second Rhyme of Kong Yiji's Long Drought and Heavy Rain"

Poverty is not a shame, but it is a shame to be ashamed of poverty. British historian Toe Fuller

What you get without labor is only "poverty". Shakespeare, English Renaissance playwright and poet.

Only poverty can force skills, it is the teacher of labor. The ancient Greek poet Te Aucry Toth.

Eat less, drink more water, bend your arms and enjoy it. Famous sayings about poverty

Confucius in the Spring and Autumn Period, Analects of Confucius, learning. Rice: used as a verb to eat. Thin food: coarse grains. Brachial (Gong): The part of the arm from the shoulder to the elbow, which generally refers to the arm here. Eating coarse grains, drinking white water and bending your arms as pillows are also fun. Confucius admitted that he was content with living in poverty instead of being greedy for money. Although his living conditions are very difficult, he can get pleasure from his study. Now it can be used to describe some people who are content with a hard life environment.