The poem "Dew" imitates "Fallen Leaves"

Imitate:

1. On the willow beside the pond, there is a round moon like a jade plate, round and bright.

When autumn comes, the fallen leaves fall one after another, like beautiful butterflies flying all over the sky.

At night, the curved moon hangs in the sky like a boat.

Here, the sun is compared to a big red apple, which comes from Gao Hongbo's colorful dream. This is a children's poem full of childlike interest, which describes children's rich imagination when drawing on white paper with colored pens, and shows children's praise and yearning for nature.

Extended data

* * * This poem has four sections:

The first section says "I have a colorful dream". These "dreams" are long, round and hard. They are lying in the pencil box, chatting and jumping on the white paper. This colorful dream is not "one", but "one". What kind of dream would it be? It left a suspense and aroused the reader's interest.

In the second and third paragraphs, the colored pencils turned into lovely spirits, jumping all the way, sliding across the green lawn, bright red wildflowers and blue sky, and finally sliding into the lush forest.

"Where the toes slip", a word "slippery" connects the whole poem in series, "grass green, bonus and sky blue", and the bright colors outline a vibrant picture.

The fourth section reveals suspense. A handful of "color dreams" are actually a handful of colored pencils. "My colorful dreams are full of fruits, and the winds of the four seasons and purple grapes are flowing in the stream ..." Sentence patterns and anthropomorphic techniques combine multiple feelings of smell, touch, vision and hearing to further feel the magic and beauty of dreams.