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I'm afraid of what will happen next.

The next sentence of "broken bones and mud are not afraid" is "leave innocence in the world"

The poem comes from Lime Poetry, which is a seven-character quatrain written by Yu Qian, a politician and writer in Ming Dynasty.

1, original text

It can only be extracted from the deep mountains after being struck by thousands of hammers. It regards the burning of the burning fire as a very common thing.

Not afraid of broken bones, leaving innocence in the world.

2. Translation

Limestone can only be mined from the deep mountains after tens of millions of hammering. It regards burning with raging fire as a very common thing.

Even if it is shattered, it is not afraid. It is willing to leave a clean body in the world.

3. Poetry emotion

This is a poem that holds things in the air to express one's ambition. The author uses lime as a metaphor to express his determination to be loyal to the country, not afraid of sacrifice and stick to noble sentiments. As an object-chanting poem, it is of no value if it is only a mechanical record of things without the deep meaning of the author. The value of this poem lies in the metaphor that lime is everywhere, and reciting lime is to praise a person's open mind and lofty personality.

4. Creative background

Yu Qian studied hard since childhood and was ambitious. According to legend, one day, he wandered into a lime kiln and watched the masters calcine lime. I saw piles of blue-black rocks, which were burned by the raging fire and turned into white lime. He was deeply moved and wrote this poem after a little thinking. It is said that Yu Qian was only twelve years old. He wrote this poem not only as a portrayal of lime image, but also as his future life pursuit.