"Life and death are generous, and children are happy; Hold your hand and grow old with your son. " From The Book of Songs, High Wind and Drumming, the original text is as follows:
Drums are dull and soldiers actively use them. Cao Tuguocheng, I travel south alone.
From Sun Zizhong, Chen Pinghe and Song Dynasty. No, I'm going home. I'm worried.
Where do you live? Lost his horse? For it? Under the forest.
Life and death are generous, and Zi Cheng says. Hold your hand and grow old with your son.
I am rich, but I am still alive. Sorry, but I believe it.
Hold your hand and your son.
Hold your hand and sleep with your son.
Hold your hand and grow old with your son.
Holding your hand, what can my husband ask for?
Of these four sentences, only "hold your son's hand and grow old with your son" is the text in the Book of Songs (there are also words in the Book of Songs that "a gentleman grows old together").
There is a very interesting topic here, which is "life and death are generous, Zi Cheng said". Mao preached "generosity" as "hard work", while Zheng (Zheng Xuan)' s Notes gave full play to its meaning, saying that "soldiers don't meet him, but say,' Death is life, and when he works hard, I say love to Cheng'. No matter what danger you encounter, don't run away alone and ignore each other. Qian Zhongshu commented in Guan Cone: "Notes are very awkward", accusing him of "going into the cave in detail", and humorously comparing "life and death are broad, and children become successful" with "life and death are not guaranteed, wives are at home, and villains are unstable" in the eighth episode of Water Margin.
The other two sentences, "* * *" and "sleep together", are variants of "grow old together" and are widely circulated in online articles.