The right way in the world is which poem does the vicissitudes come from?

Meaning: Endless things in the universe have to go through the process of production, development and extinction, and all exist as processes. The same is true of human society. The sea and mulberry fields are always changing, and new life always overcomes decay.

"The right path in the world is vicissitudes" comes from Mao Zedong's seven laws: the People's Liberation Army occupied Nanjing.

1, full text:

Zhongshan is windy and rainy, and millions of heroes cross the river. Tiger's dragon card is better than in the past, upside down and generous.

It is advisable to chase after the poor bandits with the remaining courage, not to learn from the overlord. If the sky is sentimental, it will grow old, and the right way in the world is vicissitudes.

2. Translation:

The revolutionary storm shook Nanjing, the capital of the Chiang dynasty. The People's Liberation Army broke through the natural barrier of the Yangtze River with millions of heroes and went straight to Nanjing, the base area where Chiang fought hard for three and a half months. Nanjing, an ancient capital famous for its grandeur and precipitousness, has returned to the hands of the people. It is more beautiful than before. This earth-shaking change is enough to make people sing generously and rejoice.

We should take advantage of this good opportunity to pursue the remnants of the enemy and liberate all of China. Don't learn from Xiang Yu, a tyrant of Chu who indulges his enemies for fame and wealth and leads to his own failure. If nature has knowledge, it will abide by the unchangeable law of ups and downs. Constant variation, development and progress are the inevitable laws of the development of human society.

3. Introduction to the author:

Mao Zedong (18931February 26, 976-1September 9, 976), whose real name was Runzhi (the original was Yong Zhi, later changed to Runzhi), took his pen name Zi Ren. Hunan Xiangtan people. Poet, great Marxist, proletarian revolutionist, strategist and theorist, the main founder and leader of China Production Party, China People's Liberation Army and People's Republic of China (PRC). From 1949 to 1976, Mao Zedong was the supreme leader of People's Republic of China (PRC).

The extended material "Seven Laws: The People's Liberation Army Occupy Nanjing" is a seven laws written by Mao Zedong, a modern proletarian revolutionary, on 1949.

The first couplet in the poem depicts the magnificent scene of the People's Liberation Army crossing the river to liberate Nanjing. Zhuan Xu praised the historic victory of Nanjing liberation and expressed his revolutionary pride in celebrating Nanjing liberation. The neck couplet summarizes the idea of carrying out the revolution to the end; The antithetical couplets clarify the inevitable law of historical development and make a philosophical summary of the whole poem.

The whole poem shows the confidence and determination of the People's Liberation Army to completely defeat the Kuomintang reactionaries, and expresses the poet's belief in fighting for the liberation of China. It is magnificent, magnificent, magnificent.

The style of this poem is bold and bold, and the brushwork is magnificent. There are two points worthy of praise in art: first, the perfect combination of narration and discussion, poetry and philosophy is the artistic crystallization of the wisdom of politicians, thinkers, militarists and poets; Second, the use of allusions is vivid, appropriate and profound, which is an appropriate combination of historical allusions and realistic struggles.

Seven allusions are used in the whole poem, and this poem is also one of the poems with the most dense allusions in Mao Zedong.

References:

Seven methods: People's Liberation Army occupied Nanjing-Baidu Encyclopedia