The wind has an appointment, the flowers are always the same, they are like this every year, and they will never fail. The origin of this sentence

This sentence comes from the prose "Who Will Miss the Flower Trade Wind", written in sign language by the author.

Original text:

The moment the needle was withdrawn from the vein, a sentence suddenly struck my heart. The little nurse raised her head and said while picking up the medicine bottle: My little niece asked me this morning, but I couldn't answer it. I thought you were a teacher, maybe you would know. I was silent for a while and answered quietly: There is an agreement between flowers and wind. Every year from January to May, there are twenty-four winds. When the wind comes, one kind of flower blooms; once it blows plum blossoms, second times camellias, and third times daffodils? Until the dream of all flowers blooms. The wind is trustworthy, and the flowers are always there. It is like this year after year, and it will never fail. This kind of wind is called the flower trade wind. The little nurse was stunned, and she murmured like a child: "What a beautiful promise, what a beautiful wind, it's like a fairy tale?" Even my attending doctor put down the stack of test sheets and listened to the wind outside the window.

Extended information:

Prose is a narrative literary genre that expresses the author's true feelings and has a flexible writing style. The word "prose" probably appeared during the period of Taiping and Xingguo in the Northern Song Dynasty (December 976-November 984).

"Cihai" believes that since the Six Dynasties in China, in order to distinguish between rhyme and parallel prose, all prose articles (including classics, biographies and history books) that do not rhyme or rearrange their couplings are collectively referred to as "prose". Later it refers to all literary genres except poetry.

With the development of time, the concept of prose has changed from a broad sense to a narrow sense, and has been influenced by Western culture.

Reference source: Longyuan Journal website official website - Who would miss the flower trade wind? Baidu Encyclopedia - Prose