Poems of vegetable root fragrance

Poems with fragrant vegetable roots: the cloth is warm, the vegetable roots are fragrant, and the poems and books taste long.

According to the records of Xiangfen County, he once taught in Wei's home in Shizhuang, Shaanxi Province (now Xiangfen County), leaving an inscription: "The cloth is warm, the roots are fragrant, and the poetry and books are long."

The inscription has the word "Banqiao" and the seals of "Zheng Xie" and "Chen Bing Jinshi". This calligraphy tablet is now in the Xiangfen County Museum.

Vegetable root:

The root in a narrow sense refers to the root of vegetables. Broadly speaking, it refers to hard work and poor conditions.

In our daily life, vegetables are our daily necessities. In the Dietary Guidelines for China Residents, it is required that healthy people should consume about 400-500 grams of vegetables every day, with various varieties. There are five kinds of vegetables: roots, leafy vegetables, bacteria and algae, beans and melons, eggplant.

Most vegetables have roots, especially root vegetables. When we eat these vegetables, many people often just use their necks and throw their roots into the trash can. In fact, this is not only a great waste, but also a lot of nutrition.

Vegetable rhizome engineering:

On Vegetable Roots is a classic work about vegetable roots in a broad sense. This book is a collection of aphorisms and essays, focusing on the thoughts of dealing with the world. It adopts a style of quotation, which combines the Confucian doctrine of the mean, the Taoist inaction and the Buddhist thought of being born. "Caigen Tan" is beautiful in writing, neat in antithesis, profound in meaning and intriguing.

It is a popular reading that is beneficial for people to cultivate their sentiments, temper their will and strive for progress. The author named this book "Caigen", which means that "people's intelligence and self-cultivation can only be obtained through hard training". As the saying goes, "Bite off the roots of vegetables and do whatever it takes."