Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel reservation - Xibei desert resort hotel

Xibei desert resort hotel

Original sentence: I used a grain of light sand scattered from heaven instead of missing you all my life, so there was the vast Taklimakan.

Original: I replaced my lifelong thoughts with a snowflake sprinkled by heaven, so I had the majestic Himalayas.

This is a beautiful legend and a beautiful story. A Turkic woman (now Mongolia, Inner Mongolia) fell in love with a man from the Tang Dynasty (China), but their parents opposed their being together, so they started eloping and came to the Taklimakan Desert. Originally, they could choose to retreat, but no, they firmly chose love. We walked to the depths of the Taklimakan desert without hesitation, and we didn't get out of the Taklimakan desert until all the water was used up. The woman was a little overdrawn and fainted in the sun. In order to save the woman, the man cut his hand with a knife and wetted the woman with his own blood. Seeing the blood dripping into the woman's mouth, the man was very happy and said to the woman gently, "Dear, I just want to trade my life for your life, not because I don't love you, but because I want you to be happy." ……

A woman wakes up in a sandstorm, but the man who loves her dies of excessive blood loss. Looking at the man around me, looking at the happy smile on the man's face, and the shallow tears on the man's face, the woman has been crying, as if the sandstorm has felt the sadness of the woman at this time, sobbing. ...

In order not to abandon the man, the woman dragged the man's body forward ... until the afternoon of the third day, the woman finally had hallucinations due to severe dehydration. Knowing that she couldn't survive tonight, the woman snuggled up to the man and whispered, "I spent my whole life thinking about you in exchange for a grain of light sand scattered from the sky, so there was a vast Taklimakan." Then, as the sun sets, a woman's life finally comes to an end. . .

Later, their relatives found their bodies and tried to separate them, but they could do nothing. So, after discussion, their relatives buried their bones together and finally came up with this beautiful legend: "burying sand."