What did the last sentence of the Seven Laws Long March reflect?

It reflects the optimism of the Red Army. The last sentence, "I like the snow thousands of miles away from Minshan, and my face will turn red after the three armies", means that it is even more gratifying to step on the snowy Minshan, and everyone will smile after the Red Army crosses.

Source:

The author of Seven Laws and the Long March is the modern Mao Zedong Dynasty.

The red army is not afraid of the expedition, and Qianshan is just idle.

Wuling makes waves, and Wumeng takes mud pills.

Jinsha River is warm in the clouds and cliffs, and Dadu Bridge is cold with the cross rail.

I'm glad to see that Minshan Mountain is covered with snow and stretches for miles. Our soldiers crossed it and showed a bright smile.

Precautions:

Seven laws: Seven laws are a kind of metrical poems.

Difficulties: difficulties and obstacles.

Leisure: Not afraid of difficulties, unstoppable.

Wuling: Dayuling, Qitianling, Dupangling, Zhumengling and Yuechengling located between Jiangxi, Hunan and Guangdong.

Winding: describes the continuous winding of roads, mountains and rivers.

Xiao Lang: The author explained: "Comparing Dashan to Xiao Lang or Mud Pill means' doing nothing'.

Wumeng: The name of the mountain. Wumeng mountain.

Mud ball: a small mud ball.

Jinsha: Jinsha River.

Cloudy cliff is warm: refers to the waves beating on the cliff and splashing mist, which looks like steam in the eyes of the Red Army.

Dadu Bridge: refers to the Luding Bridge on the Dadu River in Luding County, western Sichuan Province.

Iron cable: Luding Bridge on the Dadu River is a bridge composed of thirteen iron cables.

Cold: insinuating the coldness of the enemy and the seriousness of the situation.

Minshan: A mountain in western China.

Three armies: Author's note: "The Red Army has one army, two armies and four armies."

All smiles: all smiles.

Explanation:

The Red Army is not afraid of all the difficulties and hardships on the Long March, and regards Qian Shan as ordinary. In the eyes of the red army, the continuous five mountains are just the ups and downs of microwave waves, while the majestic Wumeng Mountain is just a mud pill.

The Jinsha River is full of turbid waves, patting the towering cliffs and steaming. The cross frame of the dangerous bridge on the Dadu River is shaking the iron rope hanging high in the air, and the chill bursts. What is more gratifying is that when we set foot on the snowy Minshan Mountain, everyone was smiling after the Red Army crossed it.

About the author:

Mao Zedong (18931February 26, 976-1September 9, 976), whose real name was Runzhi (the original was Yong Zhi, later changed to Runzhi), took his pen name Zi Ren. Hunan Xiangtan people. Poet, great Marxist, proletarian revolutionist, strategist and theorist, the main founder and leader of China Production Party, China People's Liberation Army and People's Republic of China (PRC).

Creative background:

The first seven laws were written by Red Army soldiers after crossing Minshan Mountain and shortly before the end of the Long March. As the leader of the Red Army, Mao Zedong has withstood numerous tests. Now, dawn is coming and victory is in sight. He wrote this magnificent poem with excitement. The Seven Laws Long March was written in late September of 1935 and finalized in June of 10.

Extended data:

On September 27th, 1935, the Red Army arrived in Bangluo Town, Tongwei, Gansu Province. Mao Zedong presided over the * * * The Politburo Standing Committee (PSC) Conference ("Bangluo Town Conference"), and formally decided to put the foothold of the Red Army's Long March in northern Shaanxi, consolidate and develop the revolutionary base areas in northern Shaanxi, and take northern Shaanxi as the base camp for leading the China revolution.

On September 28th, when Mao Zedong spoke at the meeting of cadres above the rank of the Chinese Workers and Peasants Red Army's Anti-Japanese Advance Team held at Miao Wen Street Primary School in the east of Tongwei County, he improvised a poem "Seven Laws and Long March" that has been brewing in his heart since he climbed the snow-covered Minshan Mountain all the year round.

The red army is not afraid of the expedition, and Qianshan is just idle. Wuling makes waves, and Wumeng takes mud pills. Jinsha River is warm in the clouds and cliffs, and Dadu Bridge is cold with the cross rail. I'm glad to see that Minshan Mountain is covered with snow and stretches for miles. Our soldiers crossed it and showed a bright smile.

This is the only metrical poem written by Mao Zedong during the Long March, and it was finalized in June 1935. With highly concise poems and vivid metaphors, Mao Zedong strung 25,000 Li of Qian Shan together, reviewed the difficult course of the Red Army's Long March and praised its great feat.

"I prefer the miles of snow in Minshan, and I will be full of faces after the three armies" is the crowning touch of the whole poem, which shows the change of Mao Zedong's mood from anxiety to victory joy in the Long March.

The Seven Laws of the Long March is the pinnacle of Mao Zedong's Long March poetry. It is not only an epic of the Long March, but also a hymn to the lofty revolutionary spirit of the Communist Party of China (CPC) and the Red Army. Edgar snow quoted this poem in Red Star over China, which made it the first Mao Zedong poem to meet the readers of the world.