Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - What poems are there to remember the deceased relatives?

What poems are there to remember the deceased relatives?

1, verse: ten years of life and death are two boundless, unforgettable.

From: Su Shi in Song Dynasty, Jiang Chengzi remembers dreams on the 20th day of the first month.

Interpretation: It has been ten years since you and I said goodbye, and it is unforgettable after all.

2. Poem: You bury your bones under the mud spring, and I send them to the snow world.

From: Bai Juyi's Dream of the Tang Dynasty

Interpretation: I miss you under the grave. The soil erodes your flesh and blood and finally turns into a pile of loess. Although I am still alive, I am also gray at my temples.

3. Poetry: In spring, silkworms will weave until they die, and every night, candles will dry their wick.

Said by: "Untitled" was earlier than I met her and before we broke up. It was Li Shangyin of the Tang Dynasty.

Interpretation: Spring silkworms spit out silk until they die, and candles burn to ashes to drip dry teardrop wax oil.

4, verse: an inch of acacia thousand silk. There is no place on earth that is arranged.

From: Five Dynasties, Li Guan/Li Yu's Die in Chun Mu, Hua Lian.

Interpretation: There are countless lovesickness feelings in the small heart, but there is no place to arrange these thoughts in the vast world.

5. Poetry: I'm sitting here alone, mourning for both of us. How many years do I still need when I'm seventy? .

From: Yuan Zhen, The Third Poem of Three Sorrow in Tang Dynasty.

Interpretation: doing nothing, sad for you, sighing for me. Life is short and a hundred years is long!