Current location - Music Encyclopedia - Dating - What do you mean, the peach flew away and burned its luster?
What do you mean, the peach flew away and burned its luster?
"Peach flies away and burns its brilliance" means that seeing tender willow branches and bright peach blossoms in spring will remind the bride of her youth and beauty.

-Excerpted from The Book of Songs Nan Zhou Yao Tao.

Yao Yao: It's lush. ?

Burning: the bright appearance of flowers.

Hua: Flowers.

The red peach blossom is more beautiful than the bride's appearance. How can the family be unhappy when they marry such a girl? Peach trees full of fruits are a metaphor that the bride will have more children for her husband's family (the old idea of having more children and more happiness), so that the husband's family can prosper.

Peach trees with dense branches and leaves will make the family prosperous forever. Throughout, red peach blossoms, plump and delicious peach fruits and lush peach leaves are used to compare the beautiful youth of newlyweds, wishing their love as beautiful as peach blossoms and as evergreen as peach trees.

Extended data:

Yao Tao is one of The Book of Songs, National Style and Nan Zhou. It is a wedding song, that is, a song to send the bride. On the wedding day, the bridesmaid saw the bride out, and everyone walked around the bride to the groom's house, singing: "Peach flies away and burns its glory ..."

A simple and simple song sings a woman's hopes and longings for marriage life when she gets married, and compares the happiness of marriage life with the lush branches and leaves of peach trees and numerous fruits.

References:

Tao Yao Yao, burning its China _ Baidu Encyclopedia