Appreciation of Poetry in the Glass Window

In this lyric poem, campana combines the description of scenery and objects with the expression of mysterious feelings in the subjective world. It is elegant and gloomy, rich in color and has a harmonious beauty. One summer evening, the poet watched the sunset at his home in his hometown of Marathi. The sunset leaves the last ray of sunshine, and the night will come soon. The bright red flash of sunset falls on the glass window of a family opposite the poet's apartment, and then reflects back and melts in the initial darkness of night. The setting sun left a "scorching mark" in the poet's mind.

Night arrival. The kerosene lamp passing by the Ramon River in front of the poet's house lit up, and the rotten plants on the river beach and the musty smell of hay in the nearby stables invaded the poet's house. The last light of the sunset also climbed into the room. However, it is a faint and fading lamp after all. In the eyes of sentimental poets, it sparkles with dreamy blood, like "a painful deep red blood stain"

The poet was moved by emotion, stirred by emotion, and continued to stretch the tentacles of imagination and extrapolate. There are really stars in the night sky. The poet immediately thought of Jane's mother's beautiful and shiny earrings. The night is thick. The poet seems to think that this is a thick black velvet for the shivering dusk. The last afterglow of the sunset reflected by the high glass window is like a painful deep red blood mark engraved in the heart of dusk in the poet's whimsy full of his own emotions.

The afterglow of the sunset is the theme of this lyric poem. Campana painted a colorful sunset photo with his fantastic imagination, changeable and subtle tones and novel and reliable images. After trying to create an artistic atmosphere in which the sunset is like blood, the poet's sadness over the irreversible disappearance of time is expressed in a strong contrast and contrast, which further depicts the painful disappointment and fear aroused by the arrival of the night in the poet's extremely sensitive and morbid mind.