Interpretation: Learning always feels unsatisfied, which makes people particularly patient.
Source: The Analects of Confucius: "Never tire of learning, never tire of teaching. Why is it for me? "
2. Silkworms in spring will weave until they die, and candles will drain the wick every night.
Interpretation: Spring silkworms spit silk until they die, and candles burn to ashes to drip dry teardrop wax oil. Extending to silently giving without expecting anything in return.
Origin: Tang Dynasty-Li Shangyin-Untitled time was long before I met her, but even longer after we broke up.
3. In a pair of clear and pure eyes? With great reverence and gratitude;
In the dry heart, you shed hard sweat, and on your shoulders, we saw the vast world.
4. The fire of faith burns ignorance and ignorance on campus. The moon proves that your practice is sacred.
You have spring, sunshine and flowers; In the eternal song, become a fruit!
Teacher, you sow spring, ideal and strength with the noblest feelings of human beings. ...
Sowing with language, cultivating with colored pens, watering with sweat and nourishing with painstaking efforts are the noble work of our beloved teacher.
6. You are working in the present, but you are building the future of the motherland; You teach in class, but your achievements are in all directions of the motherland.
References:
China Daily Online-Self-satisfaction of Poetry and Books.