The song "Fate is not a windlass" was originally sung by Wei Wei, and the lyrics of the song are as follows:
The Huangshagang of the white end of the world, stood up a drilling poplar.
There is a sea green house across the fence, and what is not there always wants to be there.
What I got, I still hope for, I hope for, I hope for, I hope for, I hope for, I hope for, I hope for, I hope for, I hope for, I hope for, I hope for, I hope for.
Oh, it's cool, women aren't water, men aren't tanks.
The fate of the world is not that of the windlass, the rope of the well is wrapped around oneself.
The black oil of the iron spine, sweat beads rolling sun.
The wind blows the fence, the rain washes the window, the tears bubble the moon, the human heart can be difficult to measure ah.
Anything can happen to a daughter-in-law who wants to carry yellow water soup.
Oh, the yellow water soup, women are not mud ah man is not a basket.
Fate is not the windlass to break the well rope, the cowbell shakes the spring light.
Women are not mud, men are not baskets, fate is not the windlass to break the well rope.
"Fate is not a windlass" song appreciation.
"Fate is not a Windlass" is the theme song of the television series "Windlass - Women and Wells". It is composed by Zhang Qua, composed by Xu Peidong, and sung by singer Wei Wei, and is included in the album "Hundred Collections of Chinese Singing Celebrities in the 20th Century" released on March 28, 1998, which was released on March 28th. The lyrics of "Fate is not a windlass" express that the windlass is always entangled by the rope of the well and has to break through the rope of the well, and the author uses the song to express the need to be brave to fight against the fate