"No Clothes" is a military battle song of Qin people against Xirong's invasion. There are three chapters in the whole poem, and each chapter corresponds to the next sentence; Poems are similar, and poetic progress is made in the duet. Singing, marching, marching. The following is "Qin Feng Without Clothes" compiled for everyone. This content is for your reference. I hope it helps you. Please pay attention! ! !
Qin Feng is naked.
Qin Feng's "No Clothes" comes from the Book of Songs, National Style and Qin Feng. The traditional explanation is that Emperor Wu of Jin asked the King of Zhou to make him a vassal, hoping to get the seven-chapter uniform of the vassal. Others thought it was a work of thanking others for sending clothes. This poem consists of three paragraphs, and in the form of repeated sentences, it shows the high fighting spirit of Qin Jun soldiers before going out to war: they call for encouragement to each other, forget their lives, and share the same enemy. It is an impassioned military song! Qin Feng without Clothes is the most famous patriotic poem in The Book of Songs. It is the battle song of the people of Qin (now central Shaanxi and southeastern Gansu) against the invaders of Xirong. In this war of anti-aggression, the people of Qin showed their brave and fearless spirit of martial arts and also created this impassioned war song. This poem is full of passion, generosity and unity, and it can't help but be strongly infected when you read it.
Name of the work: Yi. Source: The Book of Songs
Creation year: pre-Qin. Literary genre: poetry
easy
original text
From the original book of songs:
Have I nothing to wear? Robe with my son. Wang Yuxing, fix my spear. Hatred with my son!
How can you be an enemy without clothes? * * With the enemy. This poem consists of three paragraphs, and in the form of repeated sentences, it shows the high fighting spirit of Qin Jun soldiers before going out to war: they call for encouragement to each other, forget their lives, and share the same enemy. This is an impassioned military song, because this poem aims at singing.