This sentence comes from Mao Zedong's Swimming with the Water.
Original text:
Water-tuned singing head swimming
Only drink Changsha water and eat Wuchang fish.
Across the Yangtze River, you can see the endless sky.
No matter how stormy it is, it's better to walk around leisurely. You should have a rest today.
Zi Zaichuan said: The deceased is like a husband!
As soon as the wind blows, the tortoise and snake calm down, and the grand plan has been set.
A bridge flies north and south, and the natural barrier becomes a thoroughfare.
Set up the stone wall of Xijiang River, cut off the Yu Yun of Wushan, and let Gaoxia go out of Pinghu.
The goddess should be safe and sound, and will surprise the world.
Appreciation of works:
The poem "Shangque" depicts a magnificent picture of the motherland and expresses the poet's pride and freedom in swimming in the Yangtze River. Starting from the sentence "only drink Changsha water and eat Wuchang fish", the poet took two ancient nursery rhymes at random, transformed them and used them. Superb technology, stable work and profound meaning. On the one hand, it shows the poet's whereabouts and swimming places. The "talent" and "swim" here are not only the coherence of time and the transformation of space, but also convey the author's excitement and light mood of traveling around the world. Then he turned to writing about swimming with vigorous brushstrokes, "Crossing the river for thousands of miles and looking at the sky", which is not only a description of the specific environment, unprecedented feat and heroic will of swimming, but also a presentation of the soul. Two words, Wan Tian, set off from top to bottom, cross vertically and blend scenes. The third sentence expresses the strong feeling when swimming: "No matter how stormy it is, it is better to walk around and have a rest today", and draw a novel metaphor with a picture of a big river. In the strong contrast between the dynamic and static environment, the three-layer progressive exposition is used to express the lofty sentiments and ambitions of hitting the water in the middle. The first two sentences are about the calmness when swimming, and the last sentence is about the joy after "freedom".