Spring is not old, the wind is fine, and the willows are oblique. The next sentence is to try to see it from a detached platform, spring water is half the city.
From "Looking at the South of the Yangtze River", the full text: Spring is not old, the wind is fine and the willows are oblique. Try to see it on the detached stage, half the city is full of flowers. Fog and rain darken thousands of people. After a cold meal, I woke up but felt uncomfortable. Don't miss the old country for the old friend, try new tea with new fire. Poetry and wine use time.
Vernacular translation:
Spring is not over yet, the breeze is thin, and the willow branches dance with it obliquely. Boarding the transcendental platform, from a distance, the moat is only half full of spring water, but the city is full of colorful spring flowers. A little further, every tile house is in the rain shadow.
After the Cold Food Festival, I woke up with a homesick sigh and had to comfort myself. Don't miss my hometown in front of old friends. Let's light a new fire to make a cup of freshly picked tea. When I am drunk, I must make use of my youth.
Overall evaluation:
This heroic and graceful poem, through the complex changes of spring scenery and the author's feelings and demeanor, expresses the poet's open-minded and detached mind and attitude towards life.
The first part of the poem is about the suburban scenery in late spring when I was on stage. First of all, with the attitude of spring willow in Spring Breeze-"the wind is thin and the willow is oblique", it points out the seasonal characteristics at that time: spring dusk is not old.
The sentence "Try it" simply says that you are overlooking, and "a flower city with half-filled spring water" is set in the middle of the sentence, and the front picture is spread out with spring water and spring flowers. Then take "misty rain darkens thousands of households" as the conclusion, condescending, saying that misty rain hangs over thousands of households.
In this way, the city has a panoramic view. The author writes about scenery, paying attention to the strong contrast in color, and vividly conveying the color changes in different time and space in spring through the contrast between light and shade.