Reading poems and epigrams in spring

The poem "Spring Reading" is as follows:

1, black hair doesn't know how to study hard early, but it's too late to learn.

Translation:

When I was a teenager, I only knew how to play and didn't know how to study hard. When I was old, I regretted why I didn't know how to study hard when I was young.

Appreciate:

Encouraging Learning is an ancient poem by Yan Zhenqing, a poet in the Tang Dynasty. Encourage young people to cherish their youth, study hard and make a difference, otherwise it will be too late to regret. Let children understand that life is short, so as to improve their enthusiasm for learning. Poetry reveals this profound truth in just 28 words, and achieves the inspiring effect.

2, reading does not feel deep in spring, an inch of time and an inch of gold.

Translation:

Concentrate on reading, before you know it, it's late spring. An inch of time is an inch of gold.

Appreciate:

Bailudong was written by Wang Zhenbai, a poet in the Tang Dynasty. This poem tells the poet that he is absorbed in his research, but somehow spring is almost over. As can be seen from this poem, the poet concentrates on reading, is nervous and full every day, and completely forgets the time. He feels that time flies too fast and there is always not enough time to learn a lot of knowledge.

"One inch of time and one inch of gold" is the emotion naturally aroused by the poet's first narrative sentence, and it is also the immortal motto left by the poet to future generations. For thousands of years, people, especially scholars, have been encouraged to cherish time, pay attention to knowledge accumulation and constantly enrich themselves.

3, the efforts of young people will eventually succeed, and he will not be lazy about the light.

Translation:

When I was young, I worked hard to become a lifelong event, facing the fleeting time. Don't relax your efforts at all.

Appreciate:

The Book Hall of Titing My Brother and Nephew is a seven-character poem written by Du Xunhe, a poet in the Tang Dynasty. The first sentence of the whole poem inculcates that you should not be afraid of suffering when you are young. Only in this way can you lay the foundation for your lifelong career. The latter sentence warns not to waste time in laziness, which illustrates a dialectical truth of quantitative change to qualitative change. The language of this poem is simple, simple and natural, and you can read the whole poem without any difficult words. Simple as if it flowed naturally from the poet's heart, without any trace of carving.