What do you mean, don't climb Campbell, don't be like a spoony bird?

Explain that she doesn't want to climb to the other side and show off her vanity by the greatness of the other side; I don't want to drown in each other's indifferent shadows and sing unrequited love songs alone.

This sentence comes from the poet Shu Ting's To the Oak Tree.

Original description:

If I love you, I will never show off on your high branches like climbing Campbell.

If I love you-I will never learn from spoony birds and repeat monotonous songs for the shade.

Appreciate:

Although Shu Ting said To the Oak is not a love poem, more readers are willing to appreciate it as a love poem.

Through the artistic technique of overall symbol and the inner monologue from "kapok" to "oak tree", this poem enthusiastically and frankly sings his own personality ideal and love view, which requires standing shoulder to shoulder, independence and affection.

It can be seen that the poet has carefully designed when choosing the materials for poetry creation: oak is so suitable to represent the masculine beauty of men, while kapok is so suitable to represent women's self-reliance and equality with men. As soon as this poem was born, oak and kapok became a new group of images in China's love poems.