One day, a guest came to the house. When the guests saw that King Luo Bin was handsome and intelligent, they asked him a few questions. King Luo Bin answered questions like a flow, which surprised the guests. When Luo Bin Wang followed the guests to Luojiatang, a group of white geese were floating in the pond. The guests were interested in trying Luo Bin Wang, so they pointed to the goose and asked him to write a poem with it. Luo Bin Wang wrote this poem after a little thinking.
ode to the goose?
[ Tang] Luo binwang?
goose, goose, goose?
Xiang Tiange. ?
white hair floats green water.
Anthurium clears the waves.
Main idea of the ancient poem: Goose, bend your neck and sing to the sky. A white feather floats on the green water, and the red soles of the feet stir the clear water waves.
This poem is very lively from the perspective of a seven-year-old child. The first sentence uses three words "Goose" to express the poet's love for Goose. When the child saw the geese playing in the water, he was very happy and shouted "Goose, Goose, Goose" three times. The second sentence, "Quxiang Xiang Tiange", describes the manner of geese chirping. The word "Quxiang" describes the state of geese singing to the sky, which is very accurate. Three or four sentences describe the scene of geese swimming and playing: "White hair floats green water, and the red palm clears the waves." The two verbs of "floating" and "poking" vividly show the posture of geese swimming and playing. Several colorful phrases such as "white hair", "Anthurium andraeanum" and "green water" give people vivid visual images. The word "dial" means that the goose paddles hard in the water, causing waves. In this way, dynamic and static are born together, writing a kind of beauty of change.
The little poet used a set of antithetical sentences to describe the situation of geese swimming in the water from the color aspect. The goose's hair is white, but the river is green, the goose's feet are red, and the water waves are blue, which is very gorgeous against the red and green. In the two sentences, "white" and "red" are relative, and "green" and "green" are relative, which is a pair of up and down. Going back and forth, it's all antithesis, and its wonderful.
Ode to Goose shows Wang Bin's ability to observe things when he was a child. The language is natural and simple, but it can be vivid and vivid without modification, which is inseparable from the young poet's strong artistic generalization ability. Because the poet pays attention to observing objective things since childhood, his works of chanting things are more wonderful when he is an adult.