Classical Chinese essay without asking for anything in return

1. The poem "Being willing to help others without asking for anything in return"

The poem "Being willing to help others without asking for anything in return" includes "After gathering hundreds of flowers into honey, it will be sweet for whomever you work hard for"" The spring silkworms will not run out of silk until they die, and the wax torches will turn to ashes before their tears dry up.

1. "After collecting hundreds of flowers into honey, it will be sweet to whomever you work hard for" is a poem in "Bee" written by Luo Yin, a poet of the late Tang Dynasty.

The literal meaning of these two poems is: after they collect all the flowers and make honey, for whom are they busy and for whom are they brewing fragrant honey?

Appreciation: These two lines of poetry closely follow the image of "bee", extending and expanding the image of "laborer" it symbolizes, saying "After collecting hundreds of flowers into honey, for whom do you work hard?" "Sweet" sigh. At the same time, it also raises an intriguing question: the flowers that have been picked are turned into honey, and the hard work finally has gratifying results. The topic changes, who is all this hard work for?

2. "The spring silkworms will not run out of silk until they die, and the wax torches will turn to ashes before their tears dry up." This is "Untitled" by Li Shangyin, a poet in the late Tang Dynasty. The superficial meaning is that silkworms continue to spin silk until they die, and candles continue to burn until they are mature. Ashes won't shed candle wax. The second level of extended meaning is the meaning that is commonly expressed now, praising teachers and other hard-working people for their hard work and silent dedication.

3. With cold eyebrows and cold eyes, bowing one's head and willing to be a rú (rú) ox: It describes one who will never yield to the enemy and is willing to bow his head like an ox to the people. 2. What are the ancient poems that describe willingness to give without asking for anything in return?

Spring silkworms will not run out until they die, and wax torches will turn to ashes before their tears dry up. ——"Untitled" Li Shangyin

Sneaking into the night with the wind, moistening things silently. ——"Spring Night Happy Rain" Du Fu

Falling red is not a heartless thing. It turns into spring mud to protect the flowers. ——"Miscellaneous Poems of Jihai" Gong Zizhen

Ask the canal how clear it is, because there is a source of living water. ——"Two Poems on Reading in the Living Water Pavilion·One" by Zhu Xi

After collecting hundreds of flowers and turning them into honey, it will be sweet to whomever you work hard for. ——"Feng" Luo Yin

With a cold eyebrow and a thousand fingers, he bows his head and is willing to be a Ruzi Niu. ——"Self-mockery" Lu Xun

Dedicate yourself to the end of your life and die. ——Zhuge Liang, "Leaving the Master"

Lying stiffly in a lonely village, he does not feel sorry for himself, but still thinks of guarding the Luntai for the country. ——"Wind and Rain on November 4th" Lu You

If you want to eliminate evil things for the saint, you are willing to cherish your remaining years. ——"Moving to Languan from the left to show his nephew Xiang" Han Yu

Whoever speaks from the heart of an inch of grass will be rewarded with three rays of spring. ——"Wandering Son Song" Meng Jiao

He will not hesitate to break his body to pieces, leaving only his innocence in the world.

——"Song of Lime" Yu Qian