Can you share some "Three Quotations Poems" that you have read?

When I was in high school, three-character poems were very popular. At that time, I also knew that some universities were organizing such competitions, and many excellent works were widely circulated. Our Chinese teacher also likes to read us some such poems, so I have seen many excellent "three quotations". Share it here, I hope it will help you.

The first is an inverted three-line poem, "The crab is peeling my shell, and the notebook is writing that I/I have fallen on maple leaves and snowflakes all over the sky/and you are thinking about me". At that time, I read this poem several times, at first I couldn't understand it, then I suddenly realized it, and finally I admired the author's talent and imagination.

In the first line of this poem, two impossible situations are used to name the sports lottery of this poem. Obviously, I am peeling the crab's shell. I must write that the crab is peeling my shell, which is interesting and vivid. So is the following sentence pattern. The third line is the last sentence of the three quotation marks poem, which should be unexpected and wonderful, saying that you are thinking of me, but expressing that I am thinking of you. I have to say that the author's idea is really unexpected. This kind of poem is warm, interesting and touching.

At that time, another humorous three-line poem was like this: "Well, I didn't buy roses/you can make do with it, just take this/don't laugh, what's wrong with Sugar-Coated Berry?" Isn't it red? " When the Chinese teacher read this poem to us at that time, the whole class burst into laughter. My favorite human trait is humor, and this poem gives full play to this. At the same time, there is a little warmth and gentleness in laughter, which is a unique warmth between lovers and a trait that couples only have. At that time, my favorite three-story poem was this one.

I also read many other three-story poems, so I paid special attention to them because the teacher read them to us. At that time, there were some I liked but the teacher didn't watch. For example, this song "Elephant's Nose, Panda's Eyes/Bird's Wings, Snail's Shell/My Yourself" is not as wonderful as the last sentence of other classic three-line poems, but it is better than tenderness, which is also a point. Echoing the previous two sentences at a distance is also the best choice to express my belief.

These three poems describe the most beautiful appearance of love. Those young girls are just young and elegant in appearance, so everything goes with the flow, as if they will never grow old. These are all what we expect. Later, things changed and times changed. We have gone from ignorance to vicissitudes, from prosperity to wilderness, from a blank sheet of paper to discoloration, all of which are worthwhile. I just hope your love is picturesque.