"Living in the stream for things" is a seven-character quatrain written by Cui Daorong, a poet in the late Tang Dynasty. The first two sentences of this poem are written. The author accidentally found out that I don't know which song "Don't Tie the Boat" floated into Yuwan with the wind. The last two sentences are written. A child was playing in the front and back of the house when he suddenly found a boat sailing into the bay and thought it was a guest.
Full text: Who doesn't tie the boat outside the fence and the spring breeze blows into the fishing bay? ? The child suspected villagers, but was anxious to go to Chai Men.
There is a winding river outside the village house. I don't know whose boat is not tied with a rope. The spring breeze slowly blows the drifting boat into the fishing bend. When the child saw it, he was overjoyed and thought it was the sudden arrival of the neighboring village. He hurried to Chai Men and quickly opened the closed Chai Men.
Extended data:
In the poet's works, the small village by the water, the closed Chai Men, the scattered fences and the floating boats constitute a peaceful and beautiful picture full of pastoral life. The poet also captured a small incident that happened in an instant in this picture, depicting a warm, simple, innocent and lovely image of a rural child.
From the poet's description, readers seem to appreciate the poet's leisure, his positive and optimistic life interest and leisure mood. The so-called "adults don't lose their childlike innocence" means that they have both the maturity and sophistication of adults and the childlike innocence of children.
With such a "childlike heart", we can observe the little things in life that everyone ignores, and we can write interesting things that everyone does not see. Only by facing the ordinary and complicated daily life with such a mood can we be open-minded and open-minded.