Holding my hand means holding your hand tightly.
This sentence comes from "The Book of Songs·Beifeng·Drumming".
1. The original text is as follows:
Beat the drums and boring them, and use the troops enthusiastically. I am heading south alone for the city canal of Tuguo.
From Sun Zi Zhong, Ping Chen and Song Dynasty. If I don't return home, I will feel worried.
Love in the right place? Love and lose his horse? In order to seek it? Under the forest.
The agreement between life and death is broad, as told by Zicheng. Hold your son's hand and grow old together.
I can’t live without you. Yu Xunxi, I don’t believe you.
2. Interpretation:
The sound of drums encourages soldiers to go to the battlefield. People stayed in the country to build forts, but I went south.
Follow the general Sun Zi Zhong to mediate between Chen and Song. I was not allowed to go home for a long time, which made me sad and heartbroken.
I have set up camp and have a home, but my horse is not fastened and lost. Where can I find it? It turns out the horse is under the woods.
Whether we are together or apart, life or death, I have sworn to you. I hold your hand tightly and live with you forever.
I sigh that I have been separated from you for a long time, and it will be difficult to meet you again. The sighs are too far apart to fulfill that vow.
3. Introduction to the work:
The Book of Songs is the beginning of ancient Chinese poetry and the earliest collection of poetry. It collects works from the early Western Zhou Dynasty to the middle of the Spring and Autumn Period (from the 11th century BC to the 6th century), there are a total of 311 poems, 6 of which are Sheng poems, that is, they only have titles and no content, which are called the six Sheng poems (Nanmei, Baihua, Huashui, Youkang, Chongwu, Youyi ), reflecting the social outlook of about 500 years from the beginning of the Zhou Dynasty to the late Zhou Dynasty.
The Book of Songs is the beginning of ancient Chinese poetry and the earliest poetry collection. It collects poems from the early Western Zhou Dynasty to the middle of the Spring and Autumn Period (11th century BC to 6th century BC), with 311 poems. Six of them are Sheng poems, that is, they only have titles but no content. They are called the six Sheng poems (Nanmei, Baihua, Huashui, Youkang, Chongwu, and Youyi), reflecting about 500 poems from the beginning to the late Zhou Dynasty. social outlook during the years.