A collection of poems praising the motherland are as follows:
1. If you don’t see it, the water of the Yellow River will come up from the sky and rush to the sea never to return. ——Li Bai's "Jinjinjiu".
Appreciation: Drinking wine is a title of Yuefu songs before the Tang Dynasty. Most of the contents are about drinking wine and singing. In this poem, Li Bai uses the topic to express his anger by drinking to drink away his sorrow. This poem vividly expresses Li Bai's unruly character: full of confidence in himself, aloof and arrogant.
After the twists and turns in his political future, he showed signs of indulgence and enjoyment. The whole poem is heroic, unrestrained in emotion, fluent in language, and highly contagious. Li Bai's poems about wine can best express his personality. Although these poems were written after Chang'an Fanghui, they have deeper ideological content and more mature artistic expression. "Jianjinjiu" is his masterpiece.
2. The stars hang down over the vast plains, and the moon surges across the river. ——Du Fu's "Book of Travels at Night".
Appreciation: The breeze blows the fine grass on the river bank, and the boat with the tall mast is moored alone on the moonlit night. At that time, Du Fu had no choice but to leave Chengdu. In the first month of this year, he resigned from his post as a staff officer to the Jiedushi Governor. In April, his friend Yan Wu, who relied on him for survival in Chengdu, died. In this lonely and helpless situation, he decided to leave Shu and go east.
Therefore, here is not a general description of the scene, but an expression of emotion in the scene, showing his situation and feelings through the description of the scene: as small as the grass on the river bank, as lonely as the lonely boat in the river.
3. The Yellow River falls from the sky and flows through the East China Sea, thousands of miles written in the mind. ——Li Bai's "Gift to Pei Shishi".
Appreciation: Pei Shishi is an extraordinary and refined person. He was about to leave Li Bai and go west, so he wrote this poem to say goodbye. "Uncle Pei", Pei Kai of the Jin Dynasty, served as Zhongshu Ling, and was known as Pei Linggong. He had a handsome appearance. "People at that time thought he was a jade. People who saw him said: 'Seeing Uncle Pei is like a jade mountain rising up, and the light shines on people. '"
("Shi Shuo Xin Yu Rong Zhi") Because the poet with the same surname as the protagonist refers to Pei Shishi by Uncle Pei, he said that Pei Shishi was majestic in appearance, clear as jade mountains, and radiant. "The Yellow River falls from the sky and travels to the East China Sea, and thousands of miles are written in the mind." The Yellow River flows straight down from the west to the Central Plains, cascading thousands of miles, and flows into the East China Sea.
This poem uses the rushing water of the Yellow River to symbolize Pei Shishi’s broad and magnificent mind. The poet inserts metaphors upside down in the front, and wakes up the words in the back. The technique is changeable and vigorous.