1 Geographically, this poem describes the alpine climate. Generally, after spring, the height of the sun gradually rises and the ground radiation gradually increases, which is called spring warmth. At this time, the winter wind gradually turned into the summer monsoon, the rainy season came, and the maturity of hydrothermal conditions led to the awakening of all things on the earth and the blooming of flowers. But Dalin Temple is on a high mountain, and students all know that with the increase of altitude, the temperature drops, "the top of the mountain is too cold", so the peach blossoms in Dalin Temple have not yet opened. But with the passage of time, the height of the sun increased, the ground radiation increased, the mountain began to heat up, precipitation, and peach blossoms opened. At this time, "But now I still remember that night, that storm, I don't know how many flowers were broken." At the foot of the mountain, all the flowers withered and the peach blossoms in the mountain temple began to bloom.
2 The first two sentences of Li Bai's "Into the Wine": Have you ever seen how the Yellow River water moved out of heaven and entered the ocean, never to return? The poem describes that the source of the Yellow River is long, with a great drop, such as falling from the sky, spilling thousands of miles and flowing eastward to the Bohai Sea. The first sentence says that the water of a big river is unstoppable, and the next sentence says that the river is irreversible. The sky refers to Bayangela Mountain on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. The Yellow River originates from here, meanders eastward, and flows north and south like a few, from the first level to the second level. Three steps, a journey of 5500 kilometers, and finally into the Bohai Sea. The first and second steps are 2000-3000 meters higher, and the third step is more than 3000 meters higher, so on the plain, the Yellow River seems to fall from the sky.