Li Ge
Li Ge begins to move, leaving the wind behind the wheel, and I am surprised that time is so short. Don’t Don't forget what you’ve been taught, follow what you’ve been told, and from now on you’ll know what you’re doing. More importantly, I hope you, all of you, will be diligent and courageous, pointing to the foothills of Changbai Mountain. Go away, man, don't hesitate, be determined to rejuvenate the nation.
This section of "Li Song" is rarely known to mainlanders, but almost everyone in Taiwan knows it. Every June, when the phoenix flower blooms, primary and secondary school graduates in Taiwan sing it to bid farewell to their alma mater. However, this lyrics originated from mainland China and is said to have been written by Li Disheng, a music teacher at Peking No. 4 Middle School. Searching on the Internet, I only found that it was as early as 1947. Judging from the general meaning of the lyrics, it may have been composed during the Anti-Japanese War.