The tiger sniffing the rose implies that busy and ambitious people will be impressed by gentleness and beauty, and feel the beauty peacefully.
The tiger sniffs the rose is a classic poem from the representative work "To Me, Past, Present and Future" by the British poet Sigreve Sassoon. It talks about the masculine and feminine sides of human nature.
In fact, in this poem, it expresses that the human heart is also a two-sided entity of a tiger and a rose. If the rose is missing, it will inevitably become reckless and vulgar; if the tiger is missing, it will inevitably become cowardly. Thus losing courage. In fact, every reader has his or her own interpretation, which is the same as saying "there are a thousand Hamlets in the eyes of a thousand people".
Author of Tiger Smells Roses
Siegriff Sassoon, male, born in England on September 8, 1886, studied at Cambridge University, and was a famous British poet during World War I , writer and soldier. Before the outbreak of the First World War, he volunteered to join the army and performed bravely on the battlefield of the First World War. However, the cruel scenes on the battlefield and the deaths of his comrades made him deeply aware of the scourge of war.
So he quit the army in 1917. After returning to his hometown, Sassoon expressed his anti-war stance with a large number of poetic and literary works, the most famous of which depict the fear and emptiness of war. His representative work "To Me, Past, Present and Future", in which "There is a tiger in my heart, I smell the roses" has become a popular and immortal classic.