Girl Huaichun is a metaphor for a girl missing her marriage.
When a girl enters adolescence, she will begin to be curious, shy, and sensitive about the opposite sex around her. At this time, if the girl has a vague liking for a certain opposite sex, pays attention to the other person to the point of thinking about it, and blushes. Heartbeat, this is Huaichun.
Generally speaking, Huaichun does not last long, and it is easy to change goals. It is not a passionate and profound relationship, and there is no intention to make huge sacrifices and contributions for the goal. It is not love but a stage of life. After entering adulthood and having a mature mentality, the pure state of youthfulness gradually fades and decreases.
The so-called girl's love for spring is to express her longing and longing for this kind of beautiful love.
"Huaichun" is also a seven-character rhymed poem of the same name written by Wu Zeli, a poet of the Song Dynasty. In the poem, the author expressed the emotion of no longer having youth. It means that a girl yearns for the opposite sex, and it also means that a girl loves the opposite sex.
Extended information:
In ancient times, there were actually many poems with similar themes, which expressed the beautiful yearning of young men and women for love, which was very beautiful. For example, the scene of a man and woman dating is written in the "Guan Ju" chapter in "The Book of Songs": "Guan Guan Ju dove, in the river continent. A graceful lady, a gentleman likes to fight."
Vernacular text: Guan Guan The chirping doves accompany each other on the small island in the river. That beautiful and virtuous woman is a good spouse for a gentleman.
This is a description of a beautiful spring day, a woman trapped in a boudoir, falling in love with the scene, looking forward to the arrival of love in the bright spring days, dating her sweetheart, and spending a wonderful time together.
This book in "The Sorrows of Young Werther" tells the story of a passionate and melancholy young Werther who fell in love with a woman named Charlotte who had a fiancé. He wanted to pursue love bravely but violated the secular etiquette and morality. , the story of finally shooting himself in the trouble of love.
What girl doesn’t have a child, and what boy doesn’t fall in love with her. The original text of this sentence comes from the book "The Sorrows of Young Werther". In 1922, at the height of the New Culture Movement, Guo Moruo first translated Goethe's love novel into China. Once it was published, it was deeply loved by young men and women who had just gotten rid of the shackles of feudal ethics.
This love novel, as well as the sentence "What girl does not have a child, and what boy does not fall in love", in the context of the times, symbolized a noble "freedom of love". That is to say, everyone has the right to fall in love, whether it is a girl in love or a boy in love, they all have the right to freely find love that belongs to each other.
In addition, "Girl's Pregnancy" also refers to a Hong Kong movie released in 1963, telling the story of rich man Lin Zhijian returning to Hong Kong from Nanyang to look for industrial investment. Jian stayed at the home of his cousin Dai Chengcai. The Dais saw that he did not look like a wealthy man and their attitude was very cold. Unwilling to show off his family wealth, he went to work and study at another cousin's Jin Kee Plastic Flower Factory, and became vindictive enemies with his unruly and lively cousin Jin Cuiyu.
Baidu Encyclopedia-Huaichun (Chinese verb)