Rhetoric and Function of Red Yue Fei in Manjiang

In Yue Fei's "The Red River", there is a famous saying, "Thirty fame, dust, eight thousand miles of clouds and moons", which is connected by nouns and has endless meanings. In the past 30 years, Yue Fei, who has been committed to "serving the country faithfully", fought in the south and recovered a large area of land for the Southern Song Dynasty, while the fatuous and corrupt rulers were willing to be prisoners of the Eighth Jin Army, voluntarily surrendering and passively resisting the Japanese war. Full of ambition to serve the country, he was repeatedly snubbed and rejected by the imperial court, but regarded fame and fortune as dust and sand, determined to gallop on the battlefield all his life, recover the Central Plains and drive away the invaders. Looking back on the past and looking forward to the future, these two sentences are full of complex and dignified thoughts and feelings: there is a sigh that they have been repeatedly excluded and their ambitions are hard to pay, there is resentment against the Southern Song Dynasty's partiality and neglect of the Northern Expedition, and there is also a deep love for the people occupied by the Central Plains. A few words, a tall image with an open mind, regardless of gains and losses, fame and fortune, going through fire and water and never giving up, stands out in front of readers, with rich words and far-reaching implications.