I have nothing to give you, so I will give you the whole spring in Jiangnan. Which ancient poem is this?

The ancient poem corresponding to this sentence is "there is nothing in the south of the Yangtze River, so why not give a spring?" It comes from a poem written by Lu Kai, a poet in the Southern and Northern Dynasties, for Ye Fan.

Extended reading:

1, full text of ancient poetry:

Give Ye Fan a poem.

Lu Kai? (Southern and Northern Dynasties)

The postman who came to meet the north broke the plum blossom and gave it to his friend in the mountains.

There is no better gift in Jiangnan, and flowers will send spring.

2. Translation:

When you meet a courier going north, you will break the plum blossom.

Let him bring it to his friends in Longshan.

There is no better gift in Jiangnan.

Let's send a plum blossom to spring.

3. Create a background:

This poem was written when Lu Kai led his troops south to conquer Meiling. He boarded the army Meiling despite my busy schedule, just as Ling Mei was in full bloom, and immediately looked back at the north among the plum blossoms, thinking of Gansu's good friend Fan Wei, and happened to meet a messenger who went to the north, and there was a scene of folding plum poems for friends, so he wrote this poem.