Current location - Music Encyclopedia - Chinese History - How did ancient people use classical Chinese in picking up girls?
How did ancient people use classical Chinese in picking up girls?
Nowadays, people who pick up girls have many ways to send flowers to buy gifts. Is this how girls were picked up in ancient times? The ancients didn't have a mobile phone or the Internet, but they were just life-long partners expected by countless marriage partners.

The ancient pick up hot chicks was right: "In the past, horses and chariots were slow and loved one." The ancients were best at using poems and songs to pick up girls, just like a great poet like Li Bai, who wrote countless good poems. I don't know how many sisters I touched. Poetry is mostly written by women, and there are many poems praising women.

Isn't the famous "clouds want clothes, flowers want capacity" what Li Bai did to praise Yang Guifei? He expressed the beauty of Yang Guifei in one sentence, which made many later generations bow to their knees. This shows how charming ancient poetry is.

There is also the sentence: "My fair lady, a gentleman is good." Isn't it just that a man is infatuated with a woman, a beautiful and elegant lady, which is exactly what I want in this gentleman's dream, because that woman doesn't blush and heartbeat.

There is a saying in "Phoenix Begging for Phoenix", "I want to be crazy if I don't see you for a day." With this literal meaning, it can be seen that the feelings of missing expressed by this person are beyond words, and the deep feelings of missing float on the surface. In other words, I like you. As long as I can't see you, I will miss you so much.

A few simple words can really express my heart at that moment, and how much I miss it at that moment. The love of the ancients is so straightforward, I like you, and all the poems I write to you are my thoughts about you.

I think the ancients knew how to pick up girls better than people today. Isn't there a lyric saying, "If I can do it all over again, I want to be Li Bai. Can I at least write poems and come to Doby as a girl?"