Tired: make people tired and hurt. People all over the world are harmed by "waiting for tomorrow".
2. Source, full text and explanation:
(1) This sentence comes from a poem "Song of Tomorrow" by Qian Fu, a scholar in Ming Dynasty. The full text is as follows:
Tomorrow after tomorrow, there are so many tomorrows.
Tomorrow will never come.
If the world is tired tomorrow, it will go to Qiu Lai as a veteran in spring.
Watch the water flow eastward and the sunset at dusk.
What will tomorrow be like in a hundred years? Please listen to my song tomorrow.
Interpretation of vernacular Chinese: Tomorrow is another tomorrow, and there are so many tomorrows. I've been waiting for tomorrow all my life, and I haven't made any progress. The world is as tired of tomorrow as I am, and it will grow old after a year. Watching the river flow eastward in the morning and the sunset at night is the real life. How many tomorrows can there be in a hundred years? Please listen to my song tomorrow.
Extended data
There are two versions of this poem. The first four sentences are the same, but the last four sentences are different. "If the world is tired tomorrow, it will go to Qiu Lai in spring. Watch the water flow eastward and the sunset at dusk. What will tomorrow be like in a hundred years? Please listen to my song tomorrow. " This is the version of Qian Fu in Ming Dynasty.
The last six sentences of another version are "The world is tired of tomorrow, and tomorrow will be endless." In the morning, the water flows east, and now it grows in the west. What will tomorrow be like in a hundred years? Please listen to my song tomorrow. "It was written by Wen Jia in the late Ming and early Qing dynasties.
This song of tomorrow is the author's example to illustrate the consequences of delaying time. This poem is easy to understand and clear in meaning. Mainly to warn people to cherish time and not to waste it. What can be done today can be done today. The most important thing is not tomorrow, but seize the present.