The ancients' grateful poems are as follows:
1. There is still room for repaying kindness, but I don't know how to clear the road. Pi Rixiu of the Tang Dynasty "Hong Ci Xia Di Grateful to the Minister of War"
2. Feeling ashamed of one's talents and mistakenly receiving favor from the country's officials. "Ode to History" by Wang Changling of the Tang Dynasty
3. Be grateful throughout your life, and loyalty is not an external reward. Li Bai of the Tang Dynasty "Reward Pei Shiyu with a gift when he feels the rain"
4. Seeing this, he does not remember the person, and his kindness is overwhelming. Tang Dynasty Li Bai's "Gift from afar"
5. In the drama Xin Leyi is grateful, and the liver transfusion and gallbladder dissection are effective. "Three Poems on a Difficult Journey" by Li Bai of the Tang Dynasty
6. It is an ordinary dream to be famous and cook rice, and strange things will be grateful to people. Wang Xun's "Double Ninth Festival of Western Xia"
7. It is unknown how the kindness of heaven and earth will be repaid. Tang Dynasty Li Jianxun's "Thanksgiving on the Day after Leaving the Palace"
8. Give me a peach and give me a plum in return. The Book of Songs "Daya·Yi"
9. After dedicating oneself to one's work, one will die. The Three Kingdoms·Zhuge Liang's "Later's Discipline"
10. A drop of kindness should be repaid by a spring - the anonymous "Zengguang Xianwen·Zhu Xi's Family Instructions" of the Ming Dynasty.
Translation: It means that in difficult times, even if you receive a small favor from someone, you should repay it twice as much (in action).
11. The most important thing for a filial son is to respect his relatives; the most important thing to respect his relatives is to support the world. ——Mencius of the Warring States Period, "Mencius·Wan Zhang I"
Translation: The ultimate filial piety of a filial son does not exceed that of respecting his parents; the ultimate of respecting his parents does not exceed that of using the world to support his parents.
12. After all the hard work, the child is fifteen or sixteen years old. The wise are afraid of fatigue, the foolish and lazy are worried. ——"Song of Advising Filial Piety" by Xu Xi of the Ming Dynasty
Translation: After hard work, my son raised me until he was fifteen or sixteen years old. The child became smart and lively. I was afraid that he would not know how to cherish his own body and the child would be tired. If he is stupid, I'm afraid he will have a bad life in the future.
Poetry:
Poetry, pronounced as: shī jù is the sentence that makes up the poem. Poems usually follow the format of poetry and limit the number of words in each sentence. The earliest poems in China have a rhymed verse structure with strict metrical requirements. For example, the poems in the pre-Qin period generally have four words per sentence, which are found in the "Book of Songs".
It later developed into five-character or seven-character rhymed poetry, which is found in Tang poetry. After the economic and cultural development of the Song and Yuan Dynasties, the content of the poems was gradually expanded and interpreted. In the later period of the New Democratic Revolution, the poems evolved into free-style poetry without the limit of word count.