"May there be years to look back and grow old with affection." From Feng Tang's "Thirty" in the twenty-four exultation of the "316th National Congress".
The following is the original text:
The spring water is born, the spring forest is in full bloom, and the spring breeze is ten miles, which is not as good as you.
May there be years to look back on, and grow old with deep affection.
May there be no years to turn back, and I will spend the rest of my life with deep affection.
Original meaning: I didn't expect the years to turn back, so I used mutual affection to spend the rest of my life together, expressing a kind of beautiful expectation or blessing. ?
Extended information:
A poem similar to "I wish there were years to look back on, with a deep feeling of * * * hoary head"
1. The mountains have no tombs, and the rivers are exhausted. Unless the lofty mountains disappear, unless the surging river dries up. Unless the cold winter thunder rolls, unless the hot summer snow falls, unless the heavens and the earth converge to connect, until such things happen, I dare to abandon the sentiment to you! -Han Ming Shang Xie
Translation: Unless the towering mountains disappear, unless the surging river dries up. Unless the thunder rolls in the cold winter, unless it is snowing in the hot summer, unless the heavens and the earth intersect and connect, I dare to abandon my affection for you until all these things happen!
2. Why don't you give up your life if you succeed? -Lu Zhaolin's Ancient Meaning of Chang 'an in Tang Dynasty
Translation: If you can form a beautiful marriage with her, like a pair of harmonious flounders, who is still afraid of death, only willing to be a pair of mandarin ducks and not envy the gods.