When flowers can be folded, they must be folded straight. Don't wait until there are no flowers. Where do the branches come from?

When a flower can be folded, it must be folded straight, and don't wait for it to fall. This sentence comes from Du Qiuniang's "Tie a wisp of clothes", which means: When a flower is suitable for folding, you should fold it quickly, and don't wait until the flower withers before folding an empty one. The full text is: advise you not to cherish Zou Side's clothes, and advise you to leave them alone when you are a teenager.

The meaning of this poem is easy to understand, and it can be summed up by the word "cherish time". This is a truth that everyone knows. But it makes readers feel that their wishes are simple and strong, which makes people feel extremely shocked and has irresistible charm. Every sentence in the poem seems to repeatedly emphasize "don't be negative about the good times", and every sentence has some subtle changes, repetition without wordiness, and the cycle is not slow.

Introduction to Du Qiuniang:

Du Qiuniang called Du Zhongyang in Zi Tong Zhi Jian, and was later called Du Qiuniang. He was from Jinling in the Tang Dynasty. /kloc-became Kun Li's concubine at the age of 0/5. In the second year of Yuanhe (807), Kun Li formally rebelled and failed. Du Qiu was taken into the palace and was loved by Tang Xianzong.

In the fifteenth year of Yuanhe (820), Tang Muzong acceded to the throne and made her the Mu Fu of his son Li Cuo. Later, Li CuO was abolished as Zhang Wang and returned to her hometown. When Du Mu passed through Jinling, he saw her poor old situation and wrote "Poems of Du Qiuniang", in which Du Qiuniang's life experience was briefly described.