Bai Juyi's poem "Wildfire will not completely burn them, they will be tall again in the spring breeze."

Bai Juyi wrote Farewell to the Grass in the Ancient Plain when he was sixteen, and expressed his farewell to his friends by describing the weeds in the ancient plain.

The third sentence and the fourth sentence, "Wildfire didn't completely burn them, but they grew taller in the spring breeze", one sentence was written "withered" and the other was written "glorious", all of which meant "withered and glorious". No matter how ruthless the fire is, as long as the spring breeze blows, green weeds are everywhere, vividly demonstrating the tenacious vitality of weeds.

According to You Mao's Complete Poems of the Tang Dynasty, Bai Juyi 16 years old went from Jiangnan to Chang 'an, and took his poems and songs to see Gu Kuang, a famous man at that time. Gu Kuang looked at the name and joked, "Chang 'an is expensive, but it's not easy to live in a big place. However, when I opened my poetry collection and read "wildfire never quite consumes them, the spring breeze is blowing high" in this poem, I couldn't help admiring: "It's not easy to live in such a genius way! "Even the old-timers in the poetry world are impressed, which shows the high artistic attainments of this poem.