The poet began to express his deep affection for nature by muttering to himself. Beginning with three sentences, "When I come back …" Because of this, the poet is full of "faith and longing" for nature, hoping to keep company with nature, whisper with it and quietly appreciate its beauty; You can even pour out your pain to nature and find a shelter for your tears and love.
The poet's heart is always "towards the sun", and the word "leap" not only has the original intention of jumping, but also reveals the poet's mood of wanting to go to nature. Sunshine, stars, spring, Woods ... A flower, a grass, a stone and a tree in nature all reflect the poet's deep homesickness. Whenever the "golden day" comes, the poet's heart can't help but "shake". With the floating breath of nature and smelling the fragrance of the first flower in spring, the poet has been intoxicated.
William Wei bullinger, a friend of the poet, once said: "In his (Holderlin's) healthiest and freshest poems, there is such a great and lofty thought: nature is the sacred mother who brings life to all things." Looking at this poem, the poet's brush strokes extend from the heart to the outside, and then turn back to the heart from the outside, as if he had completely integrated into nature, truly experienced everything endowed by nature, and wandered freely in the broad mind of nature.