What does Qiu Jin's poem about wine mean?

Don't be stingy with a lot of money to buy a good knife. It is also heroic to exchange a mink coat for wine. Revolutionaries should fully cherish their own lives and make earth-shattering undertakings by bloodshed.

Wine

-Qing Qiu Jin

It's worth spending a lot of money to buy a treasure knife and change mink fur.

A cavity of blood is diligent and precious, even if spilled, it can become Bi Tao.

Author's life: Qiu Jin (1875- 1907), a modern democratic revolutionary, whose real name is Xiong Jing, a heroine of Jianhu Lake. Qiu Jin despised feudal ethics and advocated equality between men and women. He was a chivalrous man, studied literature and practiced martial arts, and went to Japan to study at his own expense. She took an active part in the revolution, and successively participated in revolutionary organizations such as the triad society, the Guangfu Association and the League. 1907, she and Xu Xilin planned to revolt in Zhejiang and Anhui at the same time on July 6th, and were arrested for the incident. In July of the same year 15, he died in Xuantingkou, Shaoxing.

Appreciation: The poems about wine show her chivalrous character and great spirit of being willing to die for the revolution. In an era of frequent national disasters, she declared: "I am not suitable, but my heart is stronger than mine"; She also said: "Don't say that women are not British, they sing on the wall of Longquan every night"! The heroic spirit of women is touching! Compared with some men with inferiority or lack of masculinity, or with some women without self-esteem, this contrast is even stronger.

Qiu Jin's short life is magnificent! After the martyrs died, the revolutionaries transported their bodies back to Hangzhou and buried them by Xizi Lake. Her poem "Autumn Wind and Autumn Rain Sorrow" is still enduring today. A rain pavilion on the north side of Su Causeway, opposite Hongqiao, is named after this sentence.