What does the sub-article mean?

Ji Zi is the title of The Book of Songs, which means: Your collar first refers to a woman's nickname for her sweetheart, and later refers to a song with the same name as an elegant name for intellectuals and literati. Son: A good name for a man, you. Collar. From "Zheng Fengzi Gan": "Qing Zi Gan, leisurely in my heart."

Original: Green and purple stripes are lingering in my heart. If I didn't go to see you, didn't you receive my letter? Green is what you wear, and leisurely is my feeling. If I never visit you, can't you take the initiative? Come on, always open your eyes, on this high tower. A day without seeing your face seems as long as March!

Green is your collar, and leisure is my mood. Even though I didn't go to see you, didn't you receive my letter? Green is what you wear, and leisure is what I miss. Even if I didn't pick you up, couldn't you come voluntarily? Come and go, look around, on this tower. I haven't seen you for a day, like three months!

Zi Jin is a poem in The Book of Songs, the first collection of poems in ancient China. This poem describes a woman who misses her sweetheart. They met on the rostrum, but they couldn't wait long. The woman is eager to see, complaining that her lover doesn't come to the appointment, and even more blaming him for not sending a message, so she sings the infinite emotion of "not seeing for a day, like March".

The whole poem consists of three chapters, each with four sentences. Through flashbacks, the psychological activities of female lovesickness are fully described. It is a rare and beautiful love song with vivid artistic conception.

The Inheritance History of The Book of Songs

It is said that there are as many as 3,000 poems handed down in the Spring and Autumn Period, and now only 3 1 1 is left (six of them are poems without eyes). After Confucius compiled The Book of Songs, the earliest recorded inheritor was Xia Zi, one of the "Ten Philosophers of Confucius" and one of the 72 sages. He has the deepest understanding of poetry, so he passed it on.

There were three poets in the early Han Dynasty, namely Shen Peigong of Lu, Gu Sheng of Qi and Han Ying of Yan. Qi's poems died in the Three Kingdoms Wei Dynasty, Lu's poems died in the Western Jin Dynasty, and Han's poems were still circulated in the Tang Dynasty, with only 10 volume left. The Book of Songs circulated today is a poem by Mao Gong.