A poem that turns into spring mud to protect flowers more.

Turning spring mud into more flowers, the whole poem is: Worrying about the distance and setting the sun, whipping at the end of the world. I quit my job and go home, just like a flower falling from a branch, but this is not a heartless thing. It can be turned into the soil of spring and can also play a role in nurturing the next generation.

First, the source of this poem

This poem comes from a seven-character quatrain "Ji Hai Za Shi" written by Gong Zizhen, a poet in Qing Dynasty. This poem is ***3 15. Ji Hai's Miscellaneous Poems is the fifth one. The poet's feelings of leaving Beijing.

Second, poetry appreciation.

The poet wrote the mighty sadness of parting with the horizon, sunset and falling flowers, and endowed himself with a sense of life experience with falling flowers; Taking the falling flower as the transition, I began to think of the falling flower-spring mud, which moved my passion to change reality and my will not to be lonely or depressed. Then I made a statement on behalf of the fallen petal, vowed to spring, and poured out my will to sing deeply.

The image of the whole poem is simple, but the scene is muddy, the contrast is unprovoked, and the mind is clear. In just 28 words, it shows the poet's broad mind, reveals a valuable life value, and has the ideological and emotional capacity of heaven and earth, which can be called the masterpiece of Ding 'an poetry.

Three. Brief introduction of poet

Gong Zizhen (1792- 184 1) was born in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province. In his later years, he lived in Yushan Pavilion in Kunshan, also known as Yushan people. Thinker, poet, writer and reformist pioneer in Qing Dynasty.

He used to be cabinet secretary, director of Zongrenyuan, and director of etiquette department. Advocate to get rid of disadvantages and resist foreign aggression. His poems are full of patriotic enthusiasm, and he is praised as "first-class in three hundred years" by Liu Yazi. He is the author of Ding 'an Anthology, with more than 300 articles and nearly 800 poems.