It was easy to abandon people in the fleeting years. What did it mean by red cherries and green plantains? And where?This sentence came from the Tang Dynasty poet Bai Juyi's "Farewell to the Ancient Grass." The original text was: " It's easy to throw people into red cherries and green plantains..."
It meant that time passed quickly and it was easy for us to forget the people and things of the past. Cherry and banana were the symbols of summer, and red and green were their colors to describe the passing of time.
This sentence did not come from a modern novel but from a famous poem of a Tang Dynasty poet.
It was easy to abandon people in the fleeting years. What did it mean by red cherries and green plantains? And where?This sentence came from the Tang Dynasty poet Li Qingzhao's "Dreamlike Order". It meant that time had passed in a hurry, and it made people feel very disappointed and emotional.
This sentence came from the first line of Li Qingzhao's "Dream of Dreams","It's easy to throw people away in the fleeting years". It came from a line in the Tang Dynasty poet Bai Juyi's "Farewell to the Ancient Grass","Time flies and my hair fades day by day". Fleeting years referred to the passage of time, and the merciless passage of time left people with only traces of time and memories of their experiences.
It was easy to abandon people in the fleeting years. What did it mean by red cherries and green plantains? And where to goThis sentence came from the Qing Dynasty poet Cao Xueqin's "Dream of the Red Chamber". The original text was "The fleeting years easily throw people red, cherries green, plantains." It meant that time flies, time flies, in the blink of an eye, year after year, people change, and things change with time.
" Red cherries and green banana trees " was a metaphor that used the changes in spring and summer to describe the changes in life. It expressed the meaning of the fleeting time of life. This sentence could also be interpreted as that even if cherries and plantains look more and more beautiful, they will eventually disappear, just like life is too short to be retained.
This sentence came from 'Dream of the Red Chamber', a classic work in the history of Chinese literature. It was widely praised and quoted, and it had a certain cultural significance and value.
Motto: Flowing light is easy to throw people away, red cherries,() banana.Motto: Flowing light easily makes people red cherries (green banana).
This sentence came from the poem "Jin Se" by Li Shangyin, a poet of the Tang Dynasty. It meant that the passage of time easily made people abandon everything, just like the flowing light easily made cherries and plantains evaporate and fade. This poem is widely quoted to describe the fleeting theme of life.
Red cherries and green plantains. What did this mean?This sentence came from the Tang Dynasty poet Bai Juyi's poem,"Farewell to the ancient grass". The entire sentence was: "The grass on the plains withers and thrives every year." The wildfire never ends, and the spring breeze blows, it grows again. The far-off fragrance encroaches on the ancient road, the clear green connecting the deserted city. And send the royal grandson to grow luxuriant and full of farewell."
Red cherries and green plantains were one of the phrases that meant that even if time passed and things remained the same and people changed, it could not change people's sadness and emotions about parting. The color of the cherries had changed from red to green, and the leaves of the banana had also changed from tender green to dark green, but these changes could not completely hide the sadness and pain in people's hearts.
Red cherries and green plantains. What did this mean?This sentence came from Li Shangyin's poem "Jin Se" in the Tang Dynasty. The light curtain rolls in the west wind, locking the deep courtyard in the cold spring. Red cherries and green plantains. Birds can't fly east or west, before the untrodden. Red cherries and green plantains. The setting sun melts gold and the clouds return."
The meaning of this sentence was that after the cherries ripened, they turned red, and the leaves of the banana trees also began to turn green. The autumn wind gently blew through the spring in the deep courtyard, and it gradually became cold. Cherry and banana were two types of plants. Red and green were their most obvious colors. Birds couldn't fly, and there was nothing but silence. Cherry and banana were common images used in Tang Dynasty literature to describe youth and the short life.