He once said, "Landscape is both a poem and a painting". The original poem is:
Wan Li Qingjiang Wan Li Tian, a village of mulberry and a village of smoke.
The fisherman was drunk and nobody called him. He woke up in the afternoon and the boat was covered with snow.
Han Wo often consciously paints scenes into poems. He once said that "scenery is both poetry and painting" (winter) and "going to Yunshan loses the painter" ("Gebei"). Poets are good at turning the pen in their hands into a brush, showing the meaning of painting in their poems, and letting vivid images touch the hearts of readers.
The first two sentences are a picture, deliberately drawing a plain. The poet used two "Wan Li" to describe the vastness of Qingjiang River and the vastness of the sky, and two "villages" to express the vastness of Ye Ping and the continuation of villages. There are not many scenery in the poem, only "river", "field", "village", "mulberry" and "smoke", but they are properly intertwined and reflect each other, forming a fresh and clear picture.
Like a long scroll, it presents the scenery of Qingjiang River and its banks in Wan Li to readers again and again. It also cleverly embeds the scene of a fishing boat driving in the river, which looks relaxed and natural, leisurely and far away. There is also the intentional repetition of "Wan Li" and "A Village", which not only makes the poem read smoothly, but also causes a slight sense of jumping in sound and emotion, just like a boat gently fluttering in the water, drifting downstream, in tune with poetry and painting.
As for the other painting in the last two sentences, the author focuses on the loneliness of mountains and rivers, and points out that there are few scenery, only fishing boats and heavy snow, which is completely consistent with the vast scenery in Jiao Ran and after the snow. With the most refined language and the most economical pen and ink, the author accurately and vividly expressed poetic and picturesque ideas, which can be described as a vivid portrayal of mountains and rivers.