The main contents of the spring breeze picture in Zhu Ziqing's "Spring"

Main content:

Describes the warmth and freshness of the spring breeze. The spring breeze is invisible, colorless and tasteless. How can we describe the ethereal spring breeze through touch, smell, hearing and vision? It is actually vivid, tasteful, emotional and tangible.

The author first used the poem "The willow wind does not blow cold on my face" by the monk Zhinan of the Southern Song Dynasty to describe the warmth and softness of the spring breeze. He was afraid that readers would not understand it easily, so he immediately came up with a sentence that everyone can understand. Copy: "Like a mother's hand touching you." "The wind brings the smell of newly turned soil, mixed with the smell of green grass, and the fragrance of various flowers, all brewing in the slightly moist air."

The author writes about spring breeze from the perspective of conveying flavor, which not only strengthens the atmosphere of spring, but also naturally connects this paragraph with the description of grass and flowers in the previous two paragraphs. The spring breeze also sends the singing of spring birds and the sound of shepherd boys' flutes into people's eardrums, "in harmony with the gentle breeze and flowing water." The author describes the spring breeze from many aspects, making this thing that is not easy to express vividly.

Extended information:

"Spring" is a work by the modern essayist Zhu Ziqing. "Spring" is a famous prose piece by Zhu Ziqing. It was first published in July 1933 and has been selected as Chinese middle school Chinese textbooks for a long time. The "Hymn of Spring", which is "full of poetic flavor", is actually full of the writer's thoughts and emotions, pursuit of life and personality in a specific period, and reflects the traditional cultural accumulation in the writer's bones and his yearning for a free realm.

After 1927, Zhu Ziqing was always looking for and creating an ideal world deep in his soul - the world of dreams, to place his "rather restless" boxing heart and resist the outside world. The turmoil caused him to be "alone" in his claustrophobic study and achieve his academic success. "Spring" describes and praises a vigorous spring, but it is also a realistic portrayal of Zhu Ziqing's spiritual world.

The author makes a comprehensive and detailed observation of spring through the eyes of children, and accurately and vividly depicts the unique scene of spring in the south of the Yangtze River through metaphors, personification and other artistic techniques, especially the flowers competing for glory. The vivid picture-like description praises and expresses the creativity of spring and brings infinite expectations to people, thereby inspiring people to work hard and move forward in the great spring.

This expresses the author's praise for spring and expresses his love for life and enterprising feelings. He used three metaphors to praise spring, describing spring as a newborn baby, a beautiful girl, and a strong young man. The soothing and calm style suddenly becomes strong and fresh, closely echoing the beginning of the work.

The realistic situation that had slipped towards plainness was suddenly pushed into the bright and cheerful artistic conception created in the first half of the work, and the whole artistic conception became one again. The "newness", "beauty" and "power" of spring have been injected into Zhu Ziqing's whole body and mind, and Zhu Ziqing has also integrated into the entire spring, moving forward persistently under the guidance of spring. Zhu Ziqing received a "new life".

Zhu Ziqing (November 22, 1898 - August 12, 1948), whose original name was Zihua and whose nickname was Qiushi, was later renamed Ziqing and whose courtesy name was Peixian. Modern Chinese essayist, poet, scholar, and democracy fighter. Originally from Shaoxing, Zhejiang, he was born in Donghai County, Jiangsu Province (now Pingming Town, Donghai County, Lianyungang City). He later settled in Yangzhou with his grandfather and father, claiming that "I am a Yangzhou native."

Graduated from middle school in 1916 and successfully entered the preparatory school of Peking University. He began publishing poetry in 1919. In 1928, the first collection of essays "Back" was published. In July 1932, he was appointed director of the Department of Chinese Literature at Tsinghua University. In 1934, "Miscellaneous Notes on European Travel" and "Miscellaneous Notes on London" were published. In 1935, he published a collection of essays "You and Me". He died in Peiping due to gastric perforation on August 12, 1948. He was only 50 years old.

Baidu Encyclopedia-Spring