Poetry that expresses the rapid passage of time

The verses that express the rapid passage of time are as follows:

1. Don’t wait for leisure. The young man’s head is gray, and he is empty and sad. ——Yue Fei's "Manjianghong·Writing Feelings".

Appreciation: Yue Fei’s words inspire the patriotism of the Chinese nation. During the Anti-Japanese War, this song and lyrics infected the Chinese people with its low but majestic singing voice. That is to say, Sima Qian's wonderful description of Lin Xiangru's "anger rising to the top of his head" shows that this is the deep hatred of the emperor. Why is this hatred becoming more intolerable the more I think about it?

Zhengyuan goes up to a tall building alone, leaning on the railing, looking at the universe, looking up at the heavens and the earth, and can't help but be filled with enthusiasm and excitement. ——At this time, the autumn rain has stopped, the wind is clear and the smoke is clear, and the scenery is better. I am full of enthusiasm, so I look up to the sky and roar to express the heroic ambition of these thousands of Dendrobium trees. The four characters "Xiaoxiao Yu Xie" were written, and the writing refused to flow straight down. Only when you saw the calmness of your demeanor did you know that it was different from the frivolous words shouted by a crazy man.

2. The prime years will never come again, and the morning will never come again. ——Tao Yuanming's "Miscellaneous Poems".

Appreciation: "Tao Yuanming has twelve miscellaneous poems, and this is the first one. Mr. Wang Yao believes that the first eight poems are "consistent in tone" and should be written in the same year. According to six of them, " However, it has been fifty years, and the marriage has happened suddenly." The meaning of the sentence is that Zhengzhi was written in 414 AD (the tenth year of Emperor Yixi of Jin'an), when Tao Yuanming was fifty years old, eight years after he resigned and returned to his fields.

This group of "Miscellaneous Poems" is actually a collection of miscellaneous poems that "do not stick to the rules and speak when they encounter things" (note by Li Shan in "Selected Works"), just as what Huang Wenhuan of the Ming Dynasty said in the fourth volume of "Analysis of Tao Poems": " Among the twelve poems, there are many sorrows and sighs, the eighth one laments poverty, and the rest laments the boss, repeated over and over again, with sorrow and indignation equal to "Chu Ci". "It can be said that lamenting the impermanence of life and lamenting the brevity of life are the keynotes of this group of "Miscellaneous Poems".

3. When hundreds of rivers reach the sea from the east to the sea, when will they return to the west? - Han Dynasty Yuefu's "Chang" "Singing Song".

Appreciation: This poem starts with "Sunflower in the Garden", and then uses the metaphor of water flowing to the sea to never return, explaining that time is like running water, and finally persuades people, Cherish your youth and work hard, and don't regret it when you are old. This poem uses the metaphor of sunflower in the garden to describe its lush growth.

Under the sunshine and dew of spring, everything is striving to grow, because they are afraid that autumn will come soon, and they know that the rhythm of life in nature is like this, and so is life if you don't take advantage of it. Working hard while enjoying the good times will waste your youth in vain. It will be too late to regret when you are old.