Ode to Goose and its Poems. Pray for the great gods.

Goose, goose, goose, Xiang Tiange. White feathers, floating in green water; The red soles of the feet stir the clear water.

Goose, goose, goose, facing the blue sky, a group of geese are singing with their necks bent. White feathers, floating on the green water. The red soles of the feet stirred the clear water waves.

According to legend, this poem was written by the Tang Dynasty poet Luo when he was a teenager. It shows us a picture of wild geese swimming in the water, with images, sounds, colors and dynamics, giving people a very real feeling.

Extended data:

The first sentence of the poem uses three words "goose" in succession. This repeated singing method expresses the poet's love for geese and enhances the emotional effect.

In the second sentence, the expression of geese chirping gives people hearing. The voice of the goose is loud, and the word "Qu" makes the image of the goose craning its neck and bowing its head to the sky very vivid. This sentence writes what you see first, then what you hear, which is very hierarchical.

The above is about geese marching on land, and the following two sentences are about geese swimming leisurely in the water. The little poet used a set of antithetical sentences to describe the wild geese swimming in the water from the color aspect. The goose's hair is white, but the river is green. The contrast between "white" and "green" is bright and dazzling.