I am a small river. I am a small river. I didn't mean to pass you by. I didn't mean to throw your rosy clouds into my soft waves. I

1. Compare "I" to a small river, which is characterized by moving forward forever and never looking back towards a goal. This metaphor vividly describes my persistence in love.

This poem was written in the mid-1920s. The aftermath of the May 4th Movement is still there, and the voice of personality liberation is still in my ears. However, the real society has returned to an unbearable state of silence, and the poet can't help but feel disappointed and confused. His personality is gone, the social storm is fierce and crazy, and the ideal corolla is shattered by ruthless reality. The "sea" symbolizes the shackles that bind people.

3. Poetry uses metaphor as a whole, so that the poet's inner feelings can be expressed through one-to-one images. The twists and turns of the river, the beauty of the rosy clouds, the ruthlessness of the sea and the fierceness of the wind and waves are all consistent with the inherent characteristics of the image itself, and at the same time they are ingeniously consistent with the poet's feelings. This makes love and things merge, and love and environment are unified. Emotion injects meaning into things, and things are both a part of the realm and a symbol of emotion. We perceive love through things. This symbolic lyric way makes emotional expression novel, indirect and interesting. (That's right)