The complete verse of "Tomorrow after tomorrow" is: "Tomorrow after tomorrow, there are so many tomorrows." This poem comes from "Tomorrow's Song" written by Qian Fu in the Ming Dynasty. It means: Tomorrow is another tomorrow, and there are so many tomorrows. This poem mentions tomorrow seven times, advising the lost world to cherish every day and live in the present, and not to waste time waiting forever for tomorrow. The meaning of the poem is simple, the language is as clear as words, the reasoning is easy to understand, and it is very educational.
Original text:
Tomorrow comes tomorrow, and there are so many tomorrows.
I live to wait for tomorrow, everything will be wasted.
If the world is tired of tomorrow, spring will pass and autumn will come. (Ruo 1: Suffering)
Look at the water flowing eastward in the morning, and the sun setting in the west at dusk.
How long can a hundred years of tomorrow be? Please listen to my song of tomorrow. (Version 1 Qian Hetan)
Tomorrow comes tomorrow, there are so many tomorrows!
Waiting for tomorrow day after day will make everything in vain.
Everyone in the world is tired of tomorrow, and tomorrow will be endless.
In the morning and dusk, the rolling water flows eastward, and the sun falls westward in ancient and modern times.
How long can a hundred years of tomorrow be? Please listen to my song of tomorrow.
Translation:
Tomorrow is another tomorrow, so many tomorrows.
If you just wait for tomorrow every day, you will only waste your time and achieve nothing.
The world is tired of tomorrow just like me, and will grow old soon after every passing year.
In the morning, watch the river flowing eastward, and in the evening, watch the sun set rapidly towards the west.
How many tomorrows can a person have in his life? Please listen to my "Song of Tomorrow".
Appreciation:
"Tomorrow's Song" has two obvious advantages: First, its ideological content is innovative. It is not an empty teaching about cherishing time, but is aimed at people's procrastination and is based on the word "tomorrow". Second, the language is vivid and vivid. The form of miscellaneous ballads uses colloquial and figurative words, making them catchy to read, easy to listen to and easy to remember. Among them, "Watch the water flowing eastward in the morning, watch the sun set in the west in the evening". Two sentences describing the scene are interspersed with the discussion, making the whole poem lively and lively.