"The mountains are like eyebrows, and the huts are like eyebrows." Using figurative rhetoric, the mountain is compared to the forehead and the hut is compared to the mole on the forehead, which makes the description of the scenery more specific, makes the article more appealing and expresses the author's love for nature. My Castle in the Air is a lyric prose by Li Lewei, a modern writer in Taiwan Province.
"Mountain is like a beautiful girl", "Mountain" is the noumenon and "beautiful girl" is a metaphor. The next sentence uses Mei Dai's metaphor to compare the hut on the mountain to a mole on the forehead. The mountain looks like an eyebrow is a simile, the hut and the mole are metaphors, and the metaphor is an eyebrow. The latter metaphor is a similar sentence based on the former metaphor: "Eyes are like pearls, and water waves are like tears in eyes.
Appreciation of "Mountain like brow, hut like brow mole":
The distant mountains are like eyebrows, the green hills are green and the huts are ethereal. What is revealed is the "self-awareness awakening" of pursuing the beauty of nature, rejecting the flow of worldly customs and being obsessed with money.
The looming and graceful "castle in the air" is not a natural photo of the landscape, but a subjective and perceptual "recreating the world" as an aesthetic subject image and a "pure, detached and independent creation of the universe".
From the beginning, mountains and huts were connected by unique and novel metaphors, absorbed in the same picture harmoniously, and coordinated with the later "huts dotted" in structure and vision.
What is even more wonderful is that it makes readers' imagination gallop: the mountain is like a woman's arch eyebrows painted with black powder, and the hut is a beauty spot on her brow, so the whole nature should be a woman's beautiful face. This subtle metaphor endows the Shan Ye cottage with a girlish spirit, which is full of the author's love for the house, Shan Ye and the whole nature.