Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - Having a holiday in January and returning in May, the child's voice is getting fatter and fatter. The teacher didn't know each other face to face and asked Xiao Pang who you were. Who borrowed this po

Having a holiday in January and returning in May, the child's voice is getting fatter and fatter. The teacher didn't know each other face to face and asked Xiao Pang who you were. Who borrowed this po

Having a holiday in January and returning in May, the child's voice is getting fatter and fatter. The teacher didn't know each other face to face and asked Xiao Pang who you were. Who borrowed this poem from which ancient poem? The reference significance of He's Homecoming Book in Tang Dynasty.

original text

Young people leave home, old people return, and the local accent has not changed.

When children meet strangers, they will smile and ask where the guests are from.

translate

I left my hometown when I was young and didn't come back until I was old. Although my accent hasn't changed, my hair on my temples has turned white.

Children in my hometown don't even know me when they see me. They asked me with a smile: Where did this guest come from?

Extended data:

My Book of Returning Home is a sentimental poem about visiting a foreign land for a long time and missing my hometown. I wrote it when I first came here, expressing my feelings of long-term travel and hurting my old age. In the first and second sentences, the poet was in a familiar and unfamiliar environment in his hometown, and he felt quite uneasy all the way: he left home in his prime; When I got home today, I couldn't help feeling.

The first sentence summarizes the fact that you have been away from home for decades with sentences like "running away from home when you are young" and "going back to your boss", which implies the feeling of hurting your boss. The "bangs" in the second sentence is the top of the previous sentence. Write down your own "boss" status in detail, and set off the changed "bangs" with the constant "local accent", which means "I don't forget my hometown, can my hometown still recognize me", thus paving the way for the following two sentences to cause children to be unfamiliar and ask questions.