The original text is as follows:
Unhappy things are often nine times out of ten, but they are no different from the speaker.
Knowing Jingmen Zicaifu, I dream of galloping south of the city.
1, Speaker: Tell others.
2, knowledge: get to know, know.
3. Fu: a good name for men in ancient times.
4, iron horse: iron horse.
5. South of the city: this refers to the battlefield with fierce fighting.
Extended data:
Fang Yue's Biezi in the Northern Song Dynasty is a farewell poem.
The first two sentences of the poem feel that life is hard and friends are hard to meet. People often encounter many setbacks or difficulties in their lives. "Unfavorable things often happen in eight or nine situations" shows a sigh about the hardships of life and also contains a faint sense of helplessness. There will always be some related and contradictory disputes between people, thus forming many secrets that are inconvenient for people to talk about. "No Different from People" shows a feeling that human feelings are separated and bosom friends are hard to find.
These two sentences are inversely proportional to the antithesis of "nine times out of ten people make mistakes" and "can be no different from the speaker", which makes the theme more prominent. The last two sentences say that when I meet a bosom friend, I sweep away the difficulties of the past and often dream of galloping on the battlefield.
Since the Yuan and Ming Dynasties, the common association of "unhappy things are often eight or nine times, and there are no two or three times with the speaker" is also quoted from Fang Yue's poem "A General with a Special Talent".