Spring is as old as ever, and people are empty and thin. Tears are red; Peach blossom falls, idle pool pavilion, although the mountain alliance is there, it is difficult to hold books, mo, mo, mo!
This sentence comes from Lu You's Hairpin Phoenix. Lu You wrote this poem in the background that he and his cousin Tang Wan really fell in love and finally got married. However, Tang Wan has been in Lujia for many years, but he can't give birth to a man and a woman for Lu You. The feudal era advocated the idea of "three sons are unfilial and have no grandchildren".
Liu Mu began to discriminate against Tang Wan and blocked their love in every way. Despite Lu You's complaints, Lu Mu made up his mind. Under the suppression of feudal filial piety, Lu You had to divorce his wife and let her marry a Zhao family after divorcing Tang Wan.
Ten years later, Lu You visited Shenyuan and met Tang Wan and her husband. They looked at each other. Tang Wan told her husband what happened to her in Lujia and what happened to her. Her husband opened it, and they gave Lu You a table of food and wine, and then they left. Lu You sat in front of the banquet for a long time and left an inscription on the wall "Hairpin Phoenix".
The whole poem shows Lu You's regret and helplessness for the loss of his beloved wife.