Fingers don't touch spring water. Why did I make you soup today? Author?

"Don't touch the spring water with your fingers. I'll make soup for you."

The specific source of this sentence has not been found out, but it is obviously wrong to say that it is quoted from Liu Xiyi's "Gongzi Hang".

I just quoted the words "Yang Chunshui" by Liu Shi, not the whole sentence.

On the whole, this sentence is probably written by people now.

Poems that have been translated into Chinese include: The Pottery Man by the Song Dynasty poet Mei: "Pottery is in front of the door, but there is no tile in the house. Fingers are not stained with mud, and scales live in the building. "

Wang Jian, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, wrote three poems about the bride: "I stayed in the kitchen for three days, washed my hands and made bride soup. I decided that not my mother-in-law, but my husband's sister should smell like Fiat. "

Don't touch the spring with your fingers;

It's very cold in spring and March, so you don't have to wash your own clothes.

Metaphorically, a person with good family conditions can be pampered and do not wash clothes or do housework by himself. Mainly used to describe women.