Question 1: Expectation, reluctance; The road is difficult, and I wish you peace; The mountain is high and the water is long, and the future is confused. Use scene
Question 1: Expectation, reluctance; The road is difficult, and I wish you peace; The mountain is high and the water is long, and the future is confused. Use scenery to express feelings or indulge in scenery.
Question 1: Parting (meeting) should not be regarded as the only sad (happy) thing in the world. Storms in the world are far more sinister than storms on the road.
Question 1: This word is written implicitly, so we should grasp it as a whole, and we can get the feelings contained in the last two sentences by combining the topic-giving someone away. This kind of feelings contained in the scenery should be based on the feelings in the scenery, or expressed by the scenery.
Question 2: Poems with the theme of "giving people away" generally show sadness or attachment, and the rhetorical question in the next part of the word-"There are thousands of hatreds today, so should we just say goodbye?" Actually, it shouldn't just be joys and sorrows. The last two sentences of the next movie tell the conclusion that "the storms in the world are far more sinister than the storms on the road".