The garden can't be closed in spring, and an almond grows in the wall. Which poem is the sentence? What are its first two sentences?

This park is not worth visiting.

Song-Ye Shaoweng

Pity should be given to the moss on the fangs,

Small mouth firewood flies for a long time.

You can't close the garden in spring,

An almond came out of the wall.

Ye Shaoweng (date of birth and death unknown), a famous poet in Southern Song Dynasty. Most of his poems describe the rural scenery of rivers and lakes, and the seven-character quatrains are particularly novel and beautiful, full of life interest.

(1) The garden is not worth it-I didn't even get in the door when I wanted to go to it. Value, encountered; Not worth it. I have no chance.

(2) Respond to the flow-probably it is distressed. Should, say guess; Pity, pity

3 fangs-fangs are wooden shoes with high heels on the front and back of the sole.

(4) Small knock on the door-a gentle knock on the door.

⑤ Chai Fei-a door made of firewood and branches.

In February in Jiangnan, the clouds are light and the wind is light, and the sun is shining. On impulse, the poet came to the door of a small garden to see the flowers and trees in the garden. He knocked on Chai Men a few times and didn't respond; I knocked a few more times, but no one answered. Knock and knock like this, but for a long time no one came to open the door to welcome guests. What's going on here? Is the master really not here? Probably afraid that the moss on the ground in the garden would be trampled, I closed the door and thanked the guests. If so, it would be too stingy!

It is disappointing that the poet is thinking and wandering outside the garden. When he was helpless and ready to leave, he looked up and suddenly saw a blooming apricot flower sticking out of the wall to greet people. The poet thought happily, ah! The spring scenery in the garden has overflowed the walls. No matter how tightly your master closes the garden door, you can't close it! "Spring scenery can't be closed, and an apricot is out of the wall." From the blooming apricot flowers, the poet appreciates the vibrant spring scenery in the garden and feels the beauty of spring. Finally, he is glad that he has come. But later, readers were not satisfied with this, but gave these two poems a philosophy of life according to their own wishes: new things will definitely break through many difficulties, stand out and flourish. These two poems have been reborn and circulated endlessly.

It doesn't matter whether the play meets the poet's wishes. Because poetry appreciation is also an artistic creation, readers might as well rely on their own life experience and artistic interest to expand the artistic conception of poetry and enrich its meaning, or use concrete symbols to describe poetry. For this phenomenon, poetic theorists say: "the author is not inevitable, why should the reader be otherwise?" "The reader's understanding is sometimes better than the author's.