Blessing ancient poems on Teachers' Day

1. A hundred flowers blossom into honey, and whoever works hard for it will be sweet.

Bees in the Tang Dynasty by Luo Yin.

Description: Bee, you picked all the flowers and brewed honey. Who have you worked hard for and who do you want to taste the sweetness?

Bees picked hundreds of flowers, brewed honey, and stopped tasting it. Just like our teachers, they have worked hard to train groups of students, and only they know the hardships.

2. Hsinchu is taller than the old bamboo branches and is supported by the old stems.

Hsinchu in Zheng Banqiao in Qing Dynasty.

Interpretation: The reason why Hsinchu can surpass the old bamboo depends entirely on the birth and nourishment of the old bamboo.

Thank the teacher for his efforts, and express gratitude and praise to the teacher. In life, the growth of new people depends on the cultivation of old people, and "all depends on the support of old cadres"

3. In spring, silkworms will weave until they die, and candles will drain the wick every night.

I have known her for a long time since Untitled, but we broke up with Li Shangyin in in the Tang Dynasty.

Description: Silkworms will not spin silk until they die, candles will burn to ashes, and wax oil like tears will drip dry.

Throughout the ages, people like to use this sentence to praise our people's teachers. Our teacher really has the spirit of selfless dedication like silkworms and candles, so this metaphor is very appropriate.

4, sneak into the night with the wind, moisten things silently.

Delighting in Rain on a Spring Night written by Du Fu in Tang Dynasty.

Commentary: When the spring breeze falls quietly at night, it is also silently moistening everything in spring.

Teachers are considerate of students' education, but they are subtle, so that you can benefit silently. Spring rain moistens everything on the earth with its silent gesture. Selfless dedication without asking for anything in return is unknown, and it is also appropriate to use it as a metaphor for a moral teacher.

5, falling red is not a heartless thing, turning into spring mud to protect flowers.

From Gong Zizhen's Five Miscellaneous Poems of Ji Hai in Qing Dynasty.

Description: Falling flowers come from branches, not heartless things. Even if it turns into spring mud, it is willing to turn into nutrients to nourish the growth of beautiful spring flowers.

This poem was originally intended to express the poet's patriotic enthusiasm and ambition to serve the motherland, but later it was often used to describe the teacher's hard work and great dedication.