Don't ask me who I am and where the flowers of wahoo are.

"Where thousands of people move, where the fire trees and silver flowers are blooming, you don't need to look for me" is a sentence in Mu Xin's My Lust Continues.

The next sentence is "If I want to meet each other, all I can do is to return to the original after a long journey."

Fire tree silver flower:

Interpretation: describes the use of lanterns and colorful decorations or fireworks to decorate a brilliant night scene. This idiom is used to describe a place that is brightly lit and looks like a fire tree and silver flowers. So now all the bustling cities, or grand gatherings held at night, are brightly lit, all of which are described by this sentence.

Appearance: Tang Su Weidao's poem "The fifteenth night of the first month": "The fire tree and silver flowers are combined, and the bridge is locked."

Use: combined; As subject, predicate and attribute; Describe the lights on holiday nights.

Introduction to the original work:

"I have Passion" tells the story of Mu Xin, who was born in 1927 and his ancestral home is in Zhejiang, China. Graduated from Shanghai Academy of Fine Arts. He settled in new york on 1982. Works: Essay Collection, Random Thoughts on Jumeika, Essay One, Improvisation Judgment, Follow the Footsteps, Malag Plan, Feast of Fish and Beauty, Stop Compassion. Poems: Three Trees in Spain, Baron, My Passion, Meet My Heart. Novel collection: Windsor Cemetery Diary and Windsor Cemetery Diary. This book is a collection of poems by Mu Xin, which is divided into three series.