Question 1: This poem presents us with the image of an old man walking in the suburbs with sadness in the autumn cold. (2 points)
Question 2: Three or four sentences in this poem personify (or metaphorically) the "autumn wind" and think it is a "nosy guy", dyeing the maple leaf red and his head white. The autumn wind blows away a year every year, arousing people's worries. The author vividly expressed his aging sadness through personification. (4 points)
Test analysis:
Question 1: "Cold urges kapok fur to change", and those who "urge" urge it, as if the cold autumn is constantly urging the poet to put on his cotton-padded jacket. This explains the weather characteristics: cold; "I used to work in the suburbs." "Walking on a stick" is inconvenient for legs and feet, and "near" is not far away. It means that people are old. So, why did the poet go for a walk in cold weather? How will he feel in the bleak autumn wind? As can be seen from "Red Maple Leaves with White Heads", the author has some sadness in his heart.
Question 2: The perspectives of scenery writing are rhetoric, space, description (static and dynamic, virtual and real, etc. ), senses, refined words, etc. When answering, candidates can consider it in order. The "autumn wind meddling" in this problem is obviously anthropomorphic. After the analysis, explain the feelings expressed by the scenery