What is the next sentence to live up to your time?

There is no next sentence to live up to the time, only the previous sentence. The original sentence is: Use dreams as horses, use sweat as springs, never forget the original intention, and live up to the time (sháo). It comes from "Dreams Are Horses", a famous poem by the contemporary poet Haizi.

The meaning of this sentence is: use your dreams as the direction and motivation to move forward, and don’t let down your beautiful youth. Shaohua refers to good times and good years. Living up to the time means living up to the good times and good years.

Using dreams as horses means using your dreams as the direction and motivation to move forward. Horse here refers to motivation and also means hope. The horse, a strong and beautiful animal, is used as a carrier of hope, carrying inner ideas and dreams and providing inner support for future life.

Live up to the time: Shaohua refers to the good times, often referring to spring and beautiful years. Live up to the time, means live up to the good times and good years.

The poetic meaning of "Dreams as Horses"

The first level, the first two stanzas, describes the poet's basic stance. The poet pursues lofty and grand goals and wants to be a loyal son from afar. Throughout his life, due to his strong and noble beliefs, the specific daily life was barren, but he did not mean that material is short-lived and not worthy of our diligent pursuit and every penny. So the poet said that he should only be a temporary lover of material things.

The second level, stanzas three and four, is about the poet’s understanding of language. The poet is one who meditates deeply on language as the home of existence. The poet realizes that one of the essential characteristics of human beings is the situation where language is obscured, the possibility of clarification and improvement, and the realistic basis for creating spiritual development through saving language. Therefore, the understanding of language is related to the understanding of survival and life.

The third level, verses five to nine, describes the poet’s great ambition and his premonition of the suffering fate. Here, the poet emphasizes that he is a son of the earth. Facing the soil of the motherland that haunts his dream, he bent deeply. Human beings are the most perishable, with an irresistible speed of death, but the earth will last forever and will nurture endless life.