What does "tiger sniffs roses" mean?

"Tiger sniffs roses" means that tigers sometimes sniff roses.

I. Sources

The English poet Sason wrote in "I, Past, Present and Future": "In my heart, the tiger smells roses."

There is a tiger in your heart, smell the roses.

Second, the significance

Tigers sometimes smell roses. Their busy and ambitious ambitions will be moved by tenderness and beauty, and they will feel beautiful safely. This is about the male and female side of human nature.

In my heart, there is the artistic conception of a tiger smelling roses, expressing the delicacy of love. No matter what kind of person, as long as there is love in his heart, he will become very gentle, stand on tiptoe and approach the beauty carefully, for fear of disturbing the morning dew on the flower bud.

Extended data

There is a tiger in my heart, smelling Rose's writing background;

Sason is a famous anti-war poet and novelist in modern England. He volunteered to join the army before the outbreak of World War I and retired in 19 17. After returning to his hometown, Sason showed his anti-war stance with a large number of poems and literary works, the most famous of which was describing the fear and emptiness in the war.

Sason's "In My Heart, Tiger Smells Rose" was translated by Mr. Yu Guangzhong into "Tiger in My Heart, Rose in My Nose". Yu Guangzhong was born in Nanjing, Jiangsu, China, 1928, with his father Yu Chaoying and his mother Sun Xiujun. When War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression was a student in Sichuan, he also felt that he was a Shuren emotionally. He once said to himself: "The mainland (Chinese mainland) is the mother, Taiwan Province Province is the wife, Hong Kong is the lover, and Europe is an affair."