Teachers' day poems praise teachers for their shortcomings.

1. After all the flowers are picked into honey, who will work hard for whom and who will be sweet?

Bees in the Tang Dynasty by Luo Yin.

Description: Bee, you picked all the flowers and brewed honey. Who have you worked hard for and who do you want to taste the sweetness?

Teachers are hard-working gardeners, cultivating beautiful gardens, and caring for every flower and bone like tireless bees, and finally turning it into sweet honey, but they take great pains.

2, sneak into the night with the wind, moisten things silently.

Delighting in Rain on a Spring Night written by Du Fu in Tang Dynasty.

Description: It falls quietly at night with the spring breeze, silently nourishing the growth of all things on the earth.

Now it is used to describe a teacher who teaches and educates people. He doesn't ask for anything in return, but silently sprinkles the drizzle of knowledge and nourishes the students.

Today, Wan Er's voice is still there, even when he is begging for words.

From Liu Tingshan's Exhibition and Worship of Teachers in Qing Dynasty.

Commentary: The voices, faces and smiles of that year seemed to be around, patiently and meticulously answering questions for students.

Seeing the teacher's portrait, I am ignorant and educated. Teachers are like candles and spring rain. It seems insignificant, but it has left a deep mark on everyone's life.

4, falling red is not a heartless thing, turning into spring mud to protect flowers.

From Gong Zizhen's Five Miscellaneous Poems of Ji Hai in Qing Dynasty.

Explanation: Although I quit my job and returned to my hometown, it was like a fallen flower, but it was not a heartless thing. Even if it turns into spring mud, it is willing to turn into nutrients to nourish the growth of beautiful spring flowers.

Teachers dedicate their youth, silently train generation after generation of students on the podium, and train talents for the motherland. However, with the growth of age, they eventually become like withered flowers, become soil, and still exert their residual heat.

5, your husband is full of peaches and plums, why not plant flowers in front of the hall.

From Bai Juyi's "Planting Flowers in the Green Field Hall in Gong Ling, Fenghe" in Tang Dynasty.

Explanation: Your students are full of peaches and plums, so there is no need to plant so many flowers and plants in front of the door.

This poem was written by Bai Juyi to praise the teacher and skillfully refers to the students with peaches and plums. Nowadays, people use "peaches and plums are everywhere" to describe students trained by many teachers, which is not only an affirmation of teachers, but also a compliment.