In the spring of Changsha Qinyuan, the midstream hits the water, and the waves stop the flying boat. What are the two allusions used to hit the water in the middle?

1, the story of "mid-stream hitting water" is the story of "mid-stream hitting water" when Zu Ti crossed the river to recover the Central Plains in the Jin Dynasty.

(Zu Ti overthrew the state power and always had the intention of reviving the recovery. ..... (after dissuading Emperor Jinyuan) Yuan Di made him a general Wei Fen and a secretariat of Yuzhou, and provided him with 1000 people's hay and 3,000 pieces of cloth, but he didn't give battle clothes and weapons, and let him recruit people himself.

Zu Ti still led 100 many exiled subordinates across the Yangtze River. In the middle of the river, he slapped the paddle hard and swore: "If Zu Ti can't pacify the Central Plains and cross the river again, it will be like the water of the Yangtze River is gone forever!" His words were impassioned and his expression was tragic, and everyone was deeply impressed by his oath. ) here refers to hitting the water (with an oar).

2. "Waves stop flying boats" is the heroic feeling of young Mao Zedong himself, and no allusions are used.

Extended data

This word was written in the autumn of 1925. At that time, the poet left Shaoshan, his hometown, and went to Guangzhou to preside over the peasant movement workshop, passing through Changsha and revisiting Orange Island.

The first que mainly writes about autumn scenery: In late autumn, the poet stood in Orange Island, overlooking the north of Xiangjiang River. Maple leaves are everywhere, and the colors of trees are mottled; The river is clear and green, and hundreds of ships race on it. Eagles soar in the sky, fish swim in the water, and everything in nature competes for free life in this autumn frost. This leads to feelings: ask the vast land, who will dominate the rise and fall?

Memories of Xiaque. My friends and I have visited here many times, and the glorious revolutionary years still haunt me. At that time, we were in our prime, full of ambition and high spirits. Pointing out the maze, inspiring words, treating those powerful people like dirt. Do you remember swimming in the middle stream and the waves stopped the flying boat?

There are two understandings of "mid-stream hits the water, waves stop the flying boat": First, the waves in the river are so high that even sailing boats feel hard, but we dare to swim in the river; Second, when we go swimming in the river, the waves can stop flying ships. I think both of these explanations can make sense, which can better set off the students' enthusiasm and pride at that time, braving the storm.

This word has two characteristics:

The first is to write about the scenery. Just a few strokes outline the late autumn scenery of Orange Island. The author seems to be standing in a very high place and seeing far away. The Xiangjiang River, Wanshan Mountain, Layered Forest, Manjiang River and White Pigeons in the north have a panoramic view; Looking up at the sky, I saw the eagle, and looking down, the fish swam to the bottom of the water, and the space was very open. Then, I concluded that "10,000 kinds of frost strive for freedom" has a high degree of generalization.

Second, ambitious. In the vast space, "ask the vast earth, who is in charge of ups and downs?" Introduce poetry into the depths of history. Then, recalling that passionate youth and writing down my ambition with lofty sentiments seem to answer the missing question: Isn't it just to make contributions to the vast land and dominate the ups and downs?

As a great man, President Mao Zedong has a very typical great temperament. What is a great temperament? I personally think the core is optimism.

Chairman Mao didn't feel pessimistic and depressed at any time, even at the lowest tide of the revolution, but he was actively thinking and seeking countermeasures, thus forming a set of his own theories to guide China's revolution to success.