You are not a hero until you reach the Great Wall, and you can only walk two Wan Li.

Meaning: You are not a hero until you reach your destination. After all, he has been walking on Wan Li Road for two years.

Author: Mao Zedong, real name Runzhi, pen name Zi Ren. Hunan Xiangtan people. China people's leader, Marxist, great proletarian revolutionist, strategist, theorist, main founder and leader of China Production Party, China People's Liberation Army and People's Republic of China (PRC), poet and calligrapher.

Poetry: Qingpingle Liupanshan Mountain

The sky is high and the clouds are light, looking at the flying geese in the south. If you don't reach the Great Wall, you are not a hero, but you will fight for 20,000.

At the top of Liupan Mountain, the red flag flutters in the west wind. Holding a long tassel today, when will it be a black dragon?

Translation:

The sky is high and the clouds are light, and the geese flying south have reached the end of the day. Not reaching the destination is by no means a hero, but he has been walking on Wan Li Road for two years. On the steep Liupanshan Mountain, the fierce west wind blows the red flag hunting ground. Today, I hold a long rope and hold my hand tightly. When was Jiang Jialong bound?

The extended material "Qingpingle Liupanshan" was a word written by Mao Zedong, a modern thinker, revolutionary and poet, in 1935, when the Long March was about to win.

1In August, 935, the Chairman smashed Zhang's route to split the Red Army. In mid-September, the Red Army conquered the natural barrier Lazikou. 10 year 10 7, the red army defeated the enemy cavalry regiment in Qingshizui, Liupanshan, Ningxia. In the afternoon, I went to Liupanshan with great interest. This word is the representative work of the author when he crossed Liupan Mountain. This word was first published in the October issue of Poetry Journal (1957).

This word begins with a vision, describes the scenery of the northern country in the clear autumn when climbing Liupanshan, reviews the victory of the Long March, and expresses the strong will of the Red Army to go north to resist Japan. In the next chapter, the red flag is written nearby, like a fire on the top of a mountain, facing the west wind, setting off the heroic victory of the Red Army soldiers.

The most difficult period has passed and the victory of the revolutionary cause is in sight. The last two sentences in the poem use the black dragon as a metaphor for the enemy. Although rhetorical questions are used, the tone is affirmative, that is, one day, the Red Army soldiers will destroy the Kuomintang reactionaries and win the final victory.