Poetry about expectations for future generations

The poems that express expectations for future generations are:

1. Stay firm on the green hills and never let go. The roots are still in the broken rocks. They are still strong despite being struck by the east, west, north and south.

2. The tree that hugs each other is born from the ground up; the nine-layered tree that joins together starts from the base of the earth; a journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.

3. I can fill the sea and move the mountains, so the ambition of a man should be the same.

4. I hope that the child will be foolish and careless, and come to the minister without any disaster.

5. Your husband should have high ambitions and do not imitate the humble worldly sentiments.

6. Don’t vomit when you cherish your beauty, and teach peaches and plums to make spring breeze.

7. If you are determined and determined, success will come sooner rather than later.

8. The thread in a loving mother’s hand, the clothes on a wanderer’s body. Before leaving, I was afraid of returning late.

9. The lights are on at three and the chicken is on at five, which is when men are studying. Black-haired people don't know how to study hard early, and white-haired people regret studying late.

10. Don’t say slanderous words are as deep as the waves, and don’t say that moving away is like the sinking sand. Although it is hard work to search for thousands of pounds, you will only get gold after blowing all the sand.

11. You should study at any time and learn everything; you should concentrate your efforts to know more and know everything.

12. Knowledge is a sweet fruit growing from a bitter root.

13. To know the affairs of the world, you must read the books of the ancients.

14. If you don’t know, ask; if you can’t, learn.

15. If you don’t accumulate steps, you can’t reach a thousand miles; if you don’t accumulate small streams, you can’t become a river.

16. If you persevere, the rotten wood will not break; if you persevere, the metal and stone can be carved.

17. Raising a question is often more important than solving a problem.

18. The work is accomplished by hard work, but wasteful by play; the success is achieved by thinking, and destroyed by casualness.

19. Black-haired people don’t know how to study hard, but white-haired people regret studying late.

20. If a bird wants to fly high, it first flutters its wings; if a man wants to make progress, he first studies.