The poems about the May 4th Youth Day are as follows:
1. Life has no roots, floating like dust on the road. Scattered and turned around by the wind, this is no longer the case. ——"Miscellaneous Poems" Wei and Jin Dynasty·Tao Yuanming
Life in this world is like a tree without roots, a flower without a pedicle, and like dust blowing in the wind on the road. This sentence laments the uncertainty of fate, which makes people feel confused and sad when reading it.
2. I advise you not to cherish your gold-threaded clothes, but to cherish your youth. Flowers are ready to be broken when they bloom, but don’t wait to break branches when there are no flowers left.
——"Golden Threaded Clothes" by Du Qiuniang of the Tang Dynasty
The general artistic conception is that I advise you not to pay too much attention to the pursuit of fame and wealth, but to cherish the best period of youth studying. When the flowers bloom and can be picked, you should go ahead and pick them. Don't wait until the flowers fade and only break an empty branch.
3. The lights are on at three and the chicken is on at five, which is when men are studying. Black-haired people don't know how to study diligently early, and white-haired people regret studying late.
——"Encouragement to Study" by Yan Zhenqing of the Tang Dynasty
Every day from midnight to when the rooster crows, it is the best time for boys to study. In their youth, they must know how to work hard and work hard. Read and study diligently. But if you only know how to play and don't know how to study hard, you will regret when you are old that you didn't know how to study hard when you were young. When you get older, you will regret why you didn't know how to study hard when you were young.
4. East of the Yangtze River and west of the Yangtze River. Mandarin ducks fly in two places on both sides of the strait. We know when we meet. ——"Song of Love" Ouyang Xiu of the Song Dynasty
On the east side of the Yangtze River, and on the west side of the Yangtze River, the mandarin ducks on both sides of the river are flying in the east and west. When can (we) meet again? In just a few sentences, the return journey and the focus of sorrow and resentment are conveyed simply and profoundly.