The Song of the Mysterious Girl by the German poet Goethe is the first song in Unit 2 of Compulsory Five in Chinese translation. The title of this unit is Guava Fragrance, which borrows the dialogue of Colombian writer Garcí a Má rquez. This is a metaphor with Latin American characteristics, full of fragrance, intended to show the literary meaning and color of this unit.
Mignon was written 1783 1 1 months ago, and was later included in the first autobiographical novel, The College William, and The Learning Age of the College William. As an interlude of the characters singing in the novel, Menon is the most popular among Goethe's songs.
The creation background of "Mei Niang Qu" is that after the hero Gao was injured in the war, his lover Mei Niang rushed back to the motherland from Nanyang alone despite his parents' opposition. Gao was unconscious because of his injuries, but then he woke up and lost his memory. The tune expresses Mei Niang's unbearable pain after seeing her sweetheart become like this.
The episode of the drama Song of Rejuvenation was written on 1935. The lover of Mei Niang, the hero of the song, returned from Nanyang and joined War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression. Unfortunately, he lost his memory because of the injury. Mei Niang, who made a special trip to visit China, sang this sad and touching song in front of her hospital bed to arouse his memories. In his creation, Nie Er used simple techniques to render the delicate and complicated psychology of the people in the play according to the needs of the plot, and achieved good artistic results. After the performance of the drama Song of Revival, Song of Mei Niang was widely sung in China and overseas Chinese.