Feeling that the hedge door will be out at dawn in autumn night to welcome the cold (II) Explanation

It means that the Yellow River, which is three miles long in Wan Li, rushes eastward into the sea, and Huashan Mountain, which is 5, meters high, soars into the sky and touches the sky. Under the oppression of the Hu people, the tears of the Central Plains people have run out, and they have been looking forward to Julian Waghann's Northern Expedition for year after year.

The source "Feelings about Coming out of the Fence Gate in Autumn Night to Meet the Cold (Part II)"-Song Luyou

Three rivers in Wan Li enter the sea, and five thousand mountains climb skyscrapers.

The adherents shed tears in the dust, and looked south at Julian Waghann for another year.

Extended information

1. Creation background of

This group of patriotic poems was written in the autumn of 1192 (the third year of Song Guang Zong Shaoxi), and Lu You was in Shanyin (now Shaoxing City, Zhejiang Province). During the Southern Song Dynasty, Jin Bing occupied the Central Plains. When the poet wrote this poem, the Central Plains had fallen into the hands of Jin people for more than 6 years. Although it was early autumn, the summer heat was still strong, which made him unable to sleep peacefully. At dawn, he stepped out of the hedge door and touched his heart, forming this poem.

2. Appreciating

The poet is actually expressing his disappointment by writing about the sufferings of the adherents in the North. Of course, they are still looking forward to it. The patriotic enthusiasm of the people is really like a jumping flame that is pressed underground, and it is getting hotter over time; However, the ruling clique in the Southern Song Dynasty was living in a drunken dream and died by the West Lake, leaving behind great rivers and mountains, national hatred and family enmity, which can be described as a long time ago. The purpose of the poet's call for the adherents is to arouse the vigilance of the people who lived in the Southern Song Dynasty and arouse their will to recover.