"If you like someone, you will humble yourself to the dust and then bloom." Which book does this sentence come from?

This sentence does not appear in Zhang Ailing's works. It was written on the back of the photo Zhang Ailing sent to Hu Lancheng. The original sentence was "seeing him, she became very low, so low that she fell into the dust and blossomed out." Hu Lancheng also mentioned it in his life.

When you fall in love with someone, you will be willing to pay for him without asking for anything in return, even if you are as small as dust in his eyes, you don't mind, and you will be happy for this kind of pay.

Extended data:

Hu Lancheng, Hu Lancheng (1906 February 28th-198 1 July 25th), a modern writer in China, was originally named Hu Jirui, nicknamed Sheng Rui, born in Shengxian County, Zhejiang Province, and the first husband of Zhang Ailing. Hu Lancheng was an auditor in yenching university when he was young, and he was good at writing. Later, he followed Wang Jingwei. During the War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression period, he became the deputy director of the propaganda department of Wang puppet regime, and was listed as a famous traitor for writing articles for Wang Jingwei.

During his stay in Japan, he began to learn Japanese, met the great mathematician jie feng, the Nobel Prize winner Yukawa Hideki and the Nobel Prize in Literature winner Kawabata Yasunari, and thus established his own knowledge system. 198 1 passed away in Tokyo on July 25th.

During the three or four years when Hu Lancheng and She Aizhen were combined, Hu Lancheng wrote two of his most important books: Years of Mountains and Rivers and This Life. Main works: On the Xijiang River, This Life, Years of Mountains and Rivers, War is Difficult, Harmony is Difficult, Zen is a Flower, China's Rites and Scenes, China Literature History, The Time between Man and Nature, etc.