Verses that express bearishness about everything

1. With tears in my eyes, I asked the flowers without saying a word, and the red flowers flew across the swing. In the Song Dynasty, Ouyang Xiu wrote "Butterfly Love Flower·How Deep the Courtyard", and the explanation of the poem: With tears in his eyes, he asked the falling flowers if they knew my thoughts. The falling flowers were silent, chaotic, and flew out of the swing bit by bit.

2. This feeling can be recalled later, but it was already at a loss at that time. Tang Dynasty, Li Shangyin's "Jin Se", interpretation of the poem: Those beautiful things and times can only remain in memories. At that time, those people thought that those things were just normal, but they didn't know how to cherish them.

3. In the heart of spring, don’t let flowers bloom, every inch of lovesickness and every inch of gray. In the Tang Dynasty, Li Shangyin's "Untitled: The Whispering East Wind and Drizzle Comes", the poem's interpretation: My heart will no longer sprout with the spring flowers; lest every inch of my lovesickness turn into ashes.

4. Life is full of love and obsession, and this hatred has nothing to do with the wind and the moon. In the Song Dynasty, Ouyang Xiu's "Spring in the Jade House: The Lord's Plan to Return", the poem's interpretation: Ah, there is love in life, and the love is infatuated to the depths, ah, there is love in life, and the love is infatuated to the depths, this sad farewell I hate not caring about it - the breeze at the top of the building, the bright moon in the sky.

5. Bodhi has no tree, and the mirror is not a stand. There is nothing there, so where is the dust? Tang Dynasty, Huineng's "Bodhi Verses", interpretation of the poem: There was no bodhi tree in the first place, and it was not a bright mirror stand. As long as the nature is empty, there will be no dust!

6. Once upon a time, it was difficult for the sea to change, but Wushan was not a cloud. Tang Dynasty, Yuan Zhen's "Five Poems on Lisi, No. 4", interpretation of the poem: Once you have been to the sea, you don't care about the water elsewhere; except for Wushan, the clouds elsewhere are not called clouds.

7. Ruthlessness is not as painful as sentimentality, an inch is like thousands of strands. In the Song Dynasty, Yan Shu's "Spring in the Jade House·Spring Hate" explains the poem: How can a heartless person understand the troubles of a passionate person? An inch of lovesickness turns into thousands of strands.