Poems of cherishing time in exhortation poems

First, you can fold flowers straight, don't wait until there are no flowers.

The poem comes from Du Qiuniang's Lich, which means: I advise you not to cherish the luxurious Lich, and I advise you to cherish your youth.

Second, young people are eager to learn, and an inch of time is not light.

From the Song Dynasty Zhu's Accidental Success, this is Zhu's personal experience to warn young people. Explain that life is never too old to learn, and we must cherish time. Because it is easy to get old, it is not light, which shows the importance of cherishing time. These two earnest words advise us to cherish the beautiful years, study hard and never let precious time slip away in vain.

Third, black hair does not know how to study hard early, and Bai Shoufang regrets studying late.

Judging from the third and fourth sentences of Yan Zhenqing's ancient poem "Poems to Encourage Learning", when he was a teenager, he only knew how to play, but he didn't know how to study hard. When he was old, he regretted why he didn't know how to study hard when he was young.

Fourth, teenagers have worked hard all their lives, so don't be lazy about time.

Du Xunhe's Book of Titles and Nephews in the Tang Dynasty means: Your efforts when you were young are a major event in your life. Don't relax your efforts in the face of the time that has passed in a hurry.

Five, tomorrow and the day after tomorrow, how many tomorrow. Tomorrow will never come.

From Qian Fu's Song of Tomorrow in Ming Dynasty, this poem repeatedly warns people to cherish time. Do what you can today, don't put it off until tomorrow, and don't waste time. Poetry has simple meaning, clear language, easy-to-understand reasoning and great educational significance.