It is a classic poem of Sason's masterpiece "To Me, Past, Present and Future". The original words are "in my heart, the tiger smells the roses." The poet Yu Guangzhong translated it as: There is a tiger in my heart, smelling the roses.
Tigers sometimes smell roses, their busy and ambitious ambitions will be moved by tenderness and beauty, and they will feel beauty safely. It is about the male and female side of human nature and expresses the subtlety of love. It is the man who confesses to the woman.
About the author:
Sason is a famous anti-war poet and novelist in modern England. He was born into an upper-class family in London. He studied at Cambridge University, but volunteered to join the army before the outbreak of World War I, and showed bravery and made many meritorious deeds in the battlefield of World War I. However, the cruel scene on the battlefield and the death of his comrades-in-arms made him deeply understand the scourge of war, so he was discharged from the army at 19 17.
After returning to his hometown, Sason showed his anti-war stance with a large number of poems and literary works, the most famous of which was describing the fear and emptiness in the war. The masterpiece "To Me, Past, Present and Future", in which "I have a tiger sniffing rose in my heart" has become an immortal classic.