Ancient poems about grass.

(Tang) Bai Juyi's "Farewell to Ancient Grass", also known as grass, rambles across the plain and comes and goes with the four seasons. Wildfire can't burn it out, but the spring breeze can revive it. Weeds and wild flowers are all over the ancient road, and the end of the grass in the sun is your journey. I once again sent my bosom friend, and the thick grass represented my deep affection.

The weeds in the ancient plains grow wildly, and they come to flourish every spring, while Qiu Lai withers. Let the wildfire burn endlessly, and the spring breeze will flourish. In the distance, the grass covered the ancient post road, extending to the empty city, full of green, clearly. The green grass grows in spring, sending the wanderer away, but the grass is full, leaving harm.

This is a poem about objects, which can also be regarded as an allegorical poem. Some people think it's a mockery of the villain. Judging from the whole poem, although the original grass refers to something, its metaphorical meaning is uncertain. "Wildfire never completely burned them, and the spring breeze blows high." However, as a kind of "tenacity", it is well known and has become a swan song that has been passed down through the ages.