Original: When I succeed, I promise you to spend a month; When you succeed, who will regret teaching her husband to find a job in the next month? I'm already mentally.
Interpretation: I will marry you when I make achievements and accompany you for generations: when you succeed, you don't know who to love; I regret asking you to seek fame. I miss someone else now.
About the author: Cangyang Gyatso (1683.03.01-kloc-0/706.1.15), the sixth Dalai Lama, Amemba, whose legal name is Renqin Cangyang Gyatso, Lausanne.
In the 22nd year of Kangxi (1683), Cangyang Gyatso was born into a serf family in Wujianlin Village, Xiayusong District, Yunala Mountain, southern Tibet. His father is Tashi Tenzin and his mother is Tsewang Ram. This family has believed in Ma Ning Buddhism for generations. In the thirty-sixth year of Kangxi (1697), Bati Sanjay Gyatso, the then Regent of Tibet, was recognized as the reincarnation of the Fifth Dalai Lama. In the same year, under the auspices of Sanjay Gyatso, a ceremony was held in Potala Palace. Kangxi was abolished in forty-four years (1705) and died in forty-five years (1706).
Cangyang Jiacuo is a versatile folk poet who wrote many delicate and sincere love songs. The most classic Tibetan woodcut in Lhasa, Love Song of Cangyang Gyatso, is beautifully written, simple and vivid. It has collected more than 60 love poems of Cangyang Gyatso, and now it has been translated into more than 20 languages, almost all over the world. His poetry transcends nationality, time and space and national boundaries, and becomes a valuable cultural heritage. The most famous sentence is "I used to worry about the loss of Sanskrit, and I was afraid to leave the whole city when I entered the mountain." The world is safe and steady, and it does not bear the burden of Tathagata. "