No one turns off the lights with me, and no one will spend the rest of my life.
There is no one to accompany me at night, and no one to share wine with me.
No one wiped away my tears, and no one dreamed of me and the past.
No one accompanied me to watch the stars, and no one woke me up to say that my tea was cold.
No one listens to my heart, and no one solves my dream.
No one made me cry, and no one was worried that I would go alone.
Looking back at the bleak place, no one is waiting in the dim light.
This passage comes from Six Chapters of a Floating Life, which means that no one accompanies me to enjoy the evening scenery, no one asks me if the porridge is warm, no one accompanies me to put out the oil twist of the oil lamp, and no one accompanies me to write our lives. This describes that I am lonely because I have no lover.
Extended data:
Six Chapters of a Floating Life is an autobiographical collection of essays by Shen Fu, an unknown painter in Qing Dynasty. * * It includes four articles, namely, Notes on Happiness in the Boudoir, Notes on Leisure, Notes on Worry and Travel Notes on the Waves. The other two books, Sun Yat-sen's Calendar and Health Preservation, were suspected as forgeries by later generations.
Six Chapters of a Floating Life focuses on the life of the author and his wife, which is better than what they saw and heard in A Wandering World. It is an ordinary and interesting family life. The work describes that the author and his wife, Chen Yun, are congenial and want to live a life of food, clothing, housing and art. Due to the oppression of feudal ethics and the suffering of poor life, their ideals are finally shattered.
The children's interest in Six Chapters of a Floating Life, Idle Feelings, has been selected as a Chinese book of People's Education Edition.