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An explanation for the ubiquitous sadness.
It is an idiom of China to grieve more than to die in the heart. Aihong: A whining goose, here is a metaphor for the displaced victims. Describing the tragic scene of refugees being displaced everywhere comes from The Book of Songs Xiaoya Hongyan.

Idioms and their stories

In the Western Zhou Dynasty, people were appointed as nobles, exploited cruelly at home, and amassed wealth crazily. The people were miserable and sorrowful everywhere. Wei Wu was sent to supervise the people's words and deeds, which made people panic. Angry people rose up and drove Zhou Liwang away. After Zhou Xuanwang ascended the throne, he led the nobles to patrol the suburbs, and everywhere he went, he was horrified by the "flying geese".

meaning

Hongyan couldn't find a place to live, flying aimlessly and crying sadly. Describe the tragic scene of displaced refugees moaning for help. Because of these two poems, people later called the refugees who could not live in peace "love red"; There are so many people suffering, almost everywhere, that they are called "ubiquitous sadness" or "ubiquitous sadness"

The word "wow" in the original poem is often used to describe the noisy voices of crying and hunger, such as "hunger for food".