Origin: This poem is from Mao Zedong's Seven Laws and Mr. Liu Yazi.
About the author: Mao Zedong, whose pseudonym is Zi Ren. China people's leader, Marxist, poet and calligrapher. His main works are: Selected Works of Mao Zedong, Collected Works of Mao Zedong and Collected Poems of Mao Zedong.
Appreciation: The first four sentences of the poem trace the poet's three contacts with Liu Yazi, while the last four sentences enlighten and exhort Liu Yazi to complain and express ardent expectations. This poem is pure and elegant, with gentle and elegant language, long affection, seemingly light and sweet taste, which has great enlightenment and influence. The whole poem deliberately downplays the political content of their three contacts, but emphasizes the cultural level between friends, thus making this poem have a strong human touch and profoundly embodying the poet's broad mind.
Poetic background:1On the night of March 28th, 949, Liu Yazi, a leftist of the Kuomintang, wrote a poem "An Affection for Chairman Mao", saying that he would return to his hometown to live in seclusion in the lake. In April of the same year, Comrade Mao Zedong wrote the inscription "Seven Laws and Mr. Liu Yazi" in return, and took Yan Ziling's seclusion in Fuchunjiang as the topic to persuade Mr. Liu Yazi to stay in Beijing and continue to participate in the founding of the People's Republic of China.
Poetry: Seven Laws and Mr. Liu Yazi and Mao Zedong
I can't forget that when I was drinking tea in Guangdong, I was talking about Ye Huang Zheng in Yuzhou.
Thirty-one years after returning from my motherland, I read zhanghua when the flowers fell.
Complaining too much can prevent heartbroken, and you should pay attention to it after a long history.
The water in Kunming, Mo Island is shallow, and watching fish is better than Fuchun River.