Where does the phrase "I don't bloom when a hundred flowers bloom, but kill a hundred flowers when I bloom" come from?

The previous sentence "I will not bloom when a hundred flowers bloom" was written by Zhu Yuanzhang, Taizu of the Ming Dynasty. The full poem is:

I will not bloom when a hundred flowers bloom. If I bloom, I will be frightened to death. If you want to fight the west wind, wear golden armor all over your body.

The following sentence "When I am in bloom, hundreds of flowers will kill me" comes from "Ode to the Chrysanthemums of the Empress" written by Huang Chao, the leader of the rebel army in the Tang Dynasty. The full poem is:?

Wait until autumn comes. On the eighth day of the lunar month, I will kill all the flowers after they bloom. The incense formation soaring to the sky penetrates Chang'an, and the whole city is covered with golden armor.

Extended information

Zhu Yuanzhang (October 21, 1328 - June 24, 1398), also known as Taizu of the Ming Dynasty (reigned from 1368 to 1398), had the courtesy name Guorui. Originally named Chongba, later named Xingzong, he was a native of Zhongli, Haozhou (now Fengyang, Anhui), a statesman, strategist, military commander, and the founding emperor of the Ming Dynasty.

Huang Chao, a native of Caozhou Yuanju (now southwest of Heze, Shandong), was the leader of the peasant uprising in the late Tang Dynasty.

Huang Chao was born in a family of salt merchants. He was good at riding and shooting, and he was proficient in writing and ink. He had few poetic talents. Huang Chao was able to compose poems when he was five years old, but he failed in many attempts as an adult. One year before Wang Xianzhi's uprising, a severe drought occurred in Guandong. Officials forced the people to pay rent and taxes and perform official duties. The people were desperate and gathered around Huangchao, where they had many armed conflicts with the Tang court officials.

In June of the second year of Qianfu (875), Huang Chao and his eight brothers and nephews responded to Wang Xianzhi. In February of the fourth year of Qianfu (877), Huang Chao led his army to capture Yunzhou and killed Xue Chong, the Jiedushi envoy. When Wang Xianzhi died in the fifth year of Qianfu (878), Huang Chao was elected as the leader, known as the "Soaring General", and became the king of Yuan Dynasty. In the first month of the sixth year of Qianfu (879), troops surrounded Guangzhou. On November 17, the first year of Guangming (880), Liu Yunzhang, who stayed in the Eastern Capital, welcomed Huang Chao's army into Luoyang. On December 1, the troops arrived at Tongguan. On December 13, the troops marched into Chang'an and ascended the throne as emperor in the Hanyuan Hall. The country was named "Daqi", the Yuan Dynasty was established, and the whole country was granted amnesty.

On June 15, the fourth year of Zhonghe (884), Huang Chao was defeated and killed in Langhu Valley. In the early years of Emperor Zhaozong's reign, Huang Chao's nephew Huang Hao led his remnants to flee and was ambushed by Xiangyin local tyrant Deng Jinsi in Hunan. The peasant uprising in the late Tang Dynasty ended.