What are the images of "spring water" in poetry?

The following is my understanding of the image of water in some ancient poems of China. My personal understanding is that the spring water "the spring river is as green as blue" gives people a feeling of vigor and vitality, while the spring water in "How much sorrow can there be, just like a spring water in a river" conveys an endless sadness. I think it is correct that you interpret the spring water in How Much Sorrow You Can Have as a Spring Water Flowing East as "flowing water can better reflect the poet's endless sorrow", because it is related to the character of the author Li Yu. His own personality is very weak, and the sadness expressed in his poems will not come so strongly, so it is not very safe to interpret it as "the water of surging waves". But it is not necessarily the water after the melting of winter snow, because I feel that poetry is something that gives people a broad imagination, and how to understand it depends on personal feelings.

Running water. In China's ancient poems, water is connected with continuous sadness, conveying the sadness and sadness that life is short and fate is impermanent. For example, in the Tang Dynasty, Li Bai wrote in "Xuanzhou Xie ■ Loubie School Book": "The water is still flowing. Although it is cut with a knife, it is even more worrying to raise a glass. Since the world can't satisfy our desire, I will loosen my hair tomorrow and take a fishing boat. " Liu Yuxi's "Zhi Zhu Ci": "Peach blossoms are everywhere, and the spring water in Shu hits the mountain stream. Bonuses are easy to decline like Lang Yi, and the water is endless. " Li Yu's "Waves on the Sand": "The flowing water is out of spring, and it is heaven and earth." Li Yu's Yu Meiren: "How much sorrow can there be, just like a river flowing eastward." Ouyang Xiu's Walking on the Beach in the Song Dynasty: "Sadness is getting farther and farther, as far as spring water." Qin Guan's "Jiangchengzi": "Even the riverside is full of tears, and it is endless."

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like fallen flowers carried away by the flowing water

The ancients said: "The fallen flowers are intentional, and the flowing water is ruthless." Combining water with the passage of time and lamenting the impermanence of life from falling flowers is a typical theme of China's ancient poems. "Running water in spring is heaven and earth." (Li Yu's "Langtaosha") "Flowers have nothing to rely on, like meeting Yan Gui." (Yan Shu's "Huanxisha") The images of falling flowers and flowing water often represent the shortness of life, the melancholy of cherishing spring and injury, and the anxiety and sadness of death. In addition, Ouyang Xiu's "Walking on the Shakespeare": "Sorrow is fading away, and the distance is like spring water." Li Yu's Yu Meiren: "How many worries can you have?" Like a river flowing eastward. "So, use the image of" spring water "to describe this kind of deep and endless sorrow.

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Running water: it conveys the sadness and sadness that life is short and fate is impermanent. Li Yu's "Waves on the Sand": "The flowing water is out of spring, and it is heaven and earth." Yu Meiren: "How much sadness can you have, just like a river flowing eastward."

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