There are two sentences derived from a poem by Li He. The original text should be "will enter the wine" ① Li He's glass bell, the amber is thick, and the small trough wine drops are pearl red. Cooking dragons, cannons, phoenixes and jade fat weeping, Luo embroidered curtains surround the fragrant wind. Play the dragon flute, beat the drum, sing with white teeth, and dance with a slim waist. What's more, the days of youth are approaching, and the peach blossoms are falling like red rain. I advise you to be drunk all day long, and the wine will not be buried in Liu Ling's grave③! In the two sentences "The days of youth are about to end, and peach blossoms are falling like red rain." The poet uses an exaggerated scene when peach blossoms fall one after another to vividly illustrate that youth is about to end, and we should cherish the good times outside.
The change of "Kang" to "Zheng" here probably means that the years are passing by, just like the peach blossoms falling in disorder, and the helplessness in the face of reality, the once heroic ambitions have to slowly fade in the polishing of life... .....