Ancient poems and famous sentences describing fallen flowers

1. Falling red is not heartless, but turning into spring mud will protect the flowers.

From Ji Hai's Miscellaneous Poems from Qing Palace. Falling flowers are not heartless things, but turn into fertile soil, which will cultivate the better growth of spring flowers.

2. Falling flowers intentionally follow the flowing water, and the flowing water loves falling flowers mercilessly.

The Story of Chai Jing by Yuan Kedanqiu. Falling flowers float into the running water, that is, drift with the flow. But the ruthless water makes the fallen flowers fall into the mud in the ups and downs. This anthropomorphic statement aims to show that one is intentional and the other is unintentional.

3. Ask flowers all day, for whom.

From Yan Yun's Falling Flowers. I've been asking about flowers all day and I haven't said anything. I don't know who the flowers bloom for and who they fall for.

4. Ask flowers all day, for whom and for whom?

Falling Flowers from the Cloud. Ran Ran, take your time. Wait, wait, wait. This poem expresses his melancholy for falling flowers and his nostalgia for leaving in spring with anthropomorphic rhetoric.