Although Beihai is on credit, it can be picked up at a high speed, but the east corner is gone, what does it mean that it is not too late to mulberry trees?

Although the North Sea is far away, it can be reached by the soaring Sheephorn hurricane. (Eastern corner - the place where the sun rises) The youth of young people has passed away. (Sangyu - the place of sunset) But it is especially important to cherish the time in your old age. Not too late.

From Wang Bo's "Preface to Prince Teng's Pavilion", although Beihai is on credit, Fuyao can accept it: the semantic version of "Zhuangzi·Xiaoyaoyou".

Eastern corner is gone, mulberry trees are not late: Eastern corner, the place where the sun rises, means morning, and is extended to "early years". Sangyu, at sunset, means evening, and by extension means "old age". The early years pass by, but if you cherish the time and work hard, your old age will not be too late. "Book of the Later Han·Feng Yi Zhuan": "What is lost in the east is gained in mulberry trees."

Extended information:

The author Wang Bo (about 650-about 676), named Zian, Han nationality, Literary author of Tang Dynasty. A native of Longmen, Jiangzhou (today's Hejin, Shanxi), he was born into a Confucian family. Together with Yang Jiong, Lu Zhaolin, and King Luo Bin, he was known as the "King Yang Luluo" and the "Four Heroes of the Early Tang Dynasty".

Wang Bo has been smart and studious since he was a child. According to the "Old Book of Tang", he was able to write articles at the age of six. His writing style was fluent and he was praised as a "child prodigy". When he was nine years old, he read Yan Shi's ancient annotations of "Hanshu" and wrote ten volumes of "Zhixia" to correct his mistakes. At the age of sixteen, Ying Yousu passed the examination and was appointed Chaosan Lang. He was kicked out of Prince Pei's Mansion for doing "Cock Fighting". After that, Wang Bo spent three years touring the mountains and rivers of Bashu and wrote a large number of poems. While serving in the army, he was demoted twice for killing an official slave privately. In August of the third year of Shangyuan (676), Emperor Gaozong of the Tang Dynasty, when he was returning from Jiaozhi to visit his father, he unfortunately crossed the sea and drowned, and died of panic.

Wang Bo is good at the Five Rhymes and Five Jue in poetry genres, and his representative works include "Sending Du Shaofu to Shuzhou"; his main literary achievement is parallel prose, which is the best in terms of quantity and quality. Representative works include "Preface to Prince Teng's Pavilion" and so on.

Reference: Baidu Encyclopedia-Wang Bo