Dare to call the sun and the moon to usher in a new day.

The last sentence of "Dare to change the sun and the moon into a new sky" is "What a sacrifice ambition". This poem comes from Mao Zedong's Seven Laws? Go to Shaoshan. The poem is as follows:

Seven methods of Shaoshan

Modern? Mao Zedong

Don't dream of vaguely cursing the passing of Sichuan. My hometown was thirty-two years ago.

The red flag rolls up the serf halberd and the black hand hangs the overlord whip.

Dare to teach the sun and the moon to change the sky for sacrifice and ambition.

I like watching thousands of waves of rice and waves, and heroes everywhere are dying.

Poetic:

After parting, many dreams are cursing the passage of time, and it has been 32 years since I left my hometown.

The red flag blows the arm of the peasants, and the enemy holds high the overlord iron whip.

Because so many people dare to sacrifice for their great ideals and change the old world.

I like to see large crops rolling like waves again, and peasant heroes returning from work in the twilight.

Seven Laws of Shaoshan is a poem by Mao Zedong, a modern poet. By reviewing the revolutionary history of Shaoshan people, it describes the harvest of people's commune members through enthusiastic labor, praises the spirit of revolutionary people's hard struggle, praises the style of China people's struggle with heaven and earth, and clearly embodies Mao Zedong's lofty ideological realm.

This poem is a freehand brushwork of scenery, a combination of reality and reality, and a correspondence between motion and static. Shaoshan is majestic and abrupt. Through the poet's rich feelings and vigorous brushwork, it is magnificent and high-spirited.