No one asked me what the meaning of porridge can be warm?

It means that someone will be standing in front of the door at dusk waiting for you to return, and someone will ask you if the porridge and rice are warm. Also known as "No one stands with me at dusk, no one asks if my porridge is warm."

Adapted from the original text of "Six Chapters of a Floating Life" written by Shen Fu of the Qing Dynasty: "When I am free, I stand with you at dusk. I laugh in front of the stove and ask if the porridge is warm." "No one stands with me at dusk, no one asks me "Porridge can be warmed" is my impression after reading "Six Chapters of a Floating Life". It describes a very lonely person, without a partner or emotional sustenance, and expresses the desolation of being alone.

This sentence is used to describe a state of empty-nest youth living alone, expressing a person's feeling of loneliness and loneliness, with no one caring about him.

The text of the poem is fresh and sincere, without any trace of embellishment, and the plot is about the deep love between husband and wife, which lasts until death; it begins with joy and ends with sorrow, drifting to a foreign land, which is tragic and touching.

Extended information:

The source is "Six Chapters of a Floating Life", which was written by Shen Fu (alias Sanbai, pseudonym Meiyi) from Changzhou in the Qing Dynasty in the 13th year of Jiaqing (1808) ) autobiographical prose. Yang Yinchuan, the brother-in-law of Wang Tao in the Qing Dynasty, found the remaining manuscript of "Six Chapters of a Floating Life" at a cold stall in Suzhou. There were only four volumes. He gave it to Wang Tao, who was in charge of the Wenzun Pavilion in Shanghai at the time, and published it on movable type in 1877.

Yang Yinchuan, the brother-in-law of Wang Tao in the Qing Dynasty, found the remaining manuscript of "Six Chapters of a Floating Life" in a cold stall in Suzhou. There were only four volumes. He gave it to Wang Tao, who was in charge of the declaration of Wenzun Pavilion in Shanghai at that time, and wrote it in movable type. The plate was issued in 1877.

The dictionary of "Floating Life" contains Li Bai's poem "Preface to a Spring Night Banquet from My Brother's Peach and Plum Garden": "Heaven and earth are the reverse journey of all things; time and light are the passers-by of hundreds of generations. And floating life is like a dream, for joy "How old is it?"

"I stand with you at dusk when I am free, and I laugh in front of the stove and ask if the porridge is warm." This is from "Six Chapters of a Floating Life" written by Shen Fu of the Qing Dynasty. "No one stands with me at dusk, no one asks me whether my porridge is warm" is my impression after reading "Six Chapters of a Floating Life", which was later changed into lyrics by the original author.