What does the ancient poem "One Journey Two or Three Miles" mean?

"One trip two or three miles" comes from "Mountain Village Ode", a poem written by Shao Yong, a philosopher in the Northern Song Dynasty.

The whole poem is as follows:

Two or three miles away, there are four or five houses in Yancun.

There are six or seven pavilions with eighty or ninety flowers.

Translation:

At a glance, it was two or three miles away, with mist covering four or five households.

There are six or seven pavilions next to the village, and many flowers are blooming.

Appreciation:

1. This poem uses the brocade expression technique to arrange smoke villages, people's homes, pavilions, flowers and other scenes together to form a pastoral scenery. And create an elegant artistic conception, expressing the poet's love and praise for nature.

2. The poet arranges a quantifier in each sentence of this poem, namely "in", "home", "seat" and "branch", which is novel and varied. He also arranges two quantifiers in each sentence. Three numbers: starting with the word "one", "two three", "four five" and "six seven" are embedded in the sentence, and "eight or ninety" returns to the beginning of the sentence. The ten Chinese characters representing numbers from one to ten are arranged according to the natural numbers. The sequence is woven together with paths, smoke, villages, pavilions, and flowers, and is naturally arranged with the poems and pictures. It only uses a few strokes to form a natural, simple and hazy mountain village landscape painting, which naturally blends into the scenery of the mountain village. In the artistic conception.