Confessing Your Love on Qixi? Choose Your Lines Wisely
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As you may have heard, it's that lovey-dovey time of year again. Yes, I am talking about Qixi, the Chinese Valentine’s Day. Besides treating your loved one to a nice meal or to a long-overdue getaway, it is also crucial to express your feelings and affections through words. Luckily, there are plenty of classic love poems throughout Chinese history for you to quote, but make sure you understand the context of the poem before you whisper them into your lover’s ear, as some of them may ruin an otherwise perfect night of romance.
愿作鸳鸯不羡仙 yuàn zuò yuānyāng bù xiàn xiān
We don’t need to envy the gods if we can be mandarin ducks
They are monogamous...until the baby comes, oops
曾经沧海难为水,除却巫山不是云 céngjīngcānghǎi nàn wéi shuǐ, chúquè wūshān bùshì yún
No one else matters to me
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但愿人长久,千里共婵娟 dàn yuàn rén chángjiǔ, qiānlǐ gòng chánjuān
May we live a long life and share the beauty of the moon even when we are thousands of miles apart.
Bros before the girls
Sound like a romantic phrase to use over video chat with your long-distance significant other? Think again, because these lyrics were written by Su Shi, the famous poet and gastronome of the Song Dynasty, to his little brother after the two were separated for seven years. As one of the most well-known poems about the moon as well as family bonds, it's usually quoted during Mid-Autumn Festival and has become a signature classic of singer and cultural icon, Teresa Teng.
愿得一人心,白首不分离 yuàn dé yī rénxīn, bái shǒu bù fēnlí
May I win someone’s heart and never be apart even when we grow old.
红豆生南国,春来发几枝。愿君多采撷,此物最相思 yuàn jūn duō cǎixié, cǐ wù zuì xiāngsī
The red beans grow in the south and sprout in the spring. Take as many as you can since it can and let them trigger lovesickness.
春风十里不如你 chūnfēng shílǐ bùrú nǐ
Even the spring breeze is inferior to you
卿须怜我我怜卿 qīng xū lián wǒ wǒ lián qīng
If you adore me I will love you back
If you don't love yourself, how the hell you gonna love somebody else?
If you think this is something like the famous line “You jump, I jump” from Titanic, then you couldn't be more wrong, because it is in fact merely the lament of a single lady who sunk into deep sorrow while staring at her own portrait.
READ: Qixi Deals for the Devoutly Lovestruck to the Hopeless Romantic
Images: Sohu, 诗词网
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