It is one of the virtues of the Chinese nation for children to support and honor their parents, and it should actually be the moral obligation of human society. Warn future generations that they must honor their parents and repay their kindness when they are alive.
Extended data:
Because the poet can't support and repay his parents under the condition of great kindness, he blames others, blames him for impermanence, takes away his parents' lives, and leads "I" to repay my parents!
The third layer of the last two chapters comes from the last two sentences of the fourth chapter, expressing misfortune. In the first two sentences, the poet jumped in the steep Nanshan he saw and the whistling wind he heard, creating a hard and desolate atmosphere, symbolizing the great pain and desolation of his parents' death, and externalizing the poet's sad mood. The four words of Rusheng overlap: fierce, angry, dharma and crouching, which aggravate grief and read like sobs. The last two sentences are helpless grievances.
The alternate use of fu and pen is a major feature of this poem. The three expressive techniques are flexible in use, echoing back and forth, lyrical and ups and downs, and reciprocating, conveying lonely sadness, which can be described as a jade plate with pearls falling, flowing clouds and flowing water, and strong artistic appeal.