Spring leak, a Chinese idiom, pinyin is ch ch ū n gu ā ng lê u xiè.
The origin of this idiom is the poem "La Ri" by Du Fu, a poet in the Tang Dynasty: The snow that invades the mausoleum belongs to the day lily, and there are wickers that leak spring.
Sentences containing spring leaks
1, spring leak, everything recovers.
2. His smile is warm and bright like the rain in spring.
Her eyes are full of hope and vitality like spring.
4. Spring leaks, flowers bloom, and the breath of spring comes to my face.
Spring leaked, the snow melted and spring came back.
Brief introduction of the author of Lari
Du Fu (7 12 -770), with beautiful words, is a great realistic poet in the Tang Dynasty, and is also called Du Li with Li Bai. He was born in Gongxian County, Henan Province, and his ancestral home is Xiangyang, Hubei Province. Du Fu's influence on China's classical poetry is far-reaching, and he was called the sage of poetry by the late Buddha, and his poems were called the history of poetry.
Du Fu's life experienced a process from prosperity to decline in the Tang Dynasty. His poems profoundly reflect social contradictions and people's sufferings, and express his deep concern for the country and people. His poems are rigorous in style, simple in language, diverse in form and wide in content, with lyrical poems about history, idyllic landscapes, frontier wars and worries about the country and the people.
La Ri is a five-character ancient poem by Du Fu, which describes the scene of winter. This poem is based on the twelfth lunar month, and through the description of the snow scene, it expresses the poet's expectation for spring and his love for life. This poem fully embodies Du Fu's poetic talent and his unique understanding of life.
Du Fu is a great poet, and his poems are rich and colorful, which are deeply loved and praised by people. His poems not only have high artistic value, but also have strong historical and cultural value, which has important reference value for studying the social history and culture of the Tang Dynasty.