Winter is coming, the weather is cold, the lake is frozen and white everywhere. Keiko took a golden plate to get some ice cubes to play with. The ice always falls, but Keiko persists and tirelessly packs it. He didn't give up playing with ice, nor did he give up anything because of difficulties.
Finally, with the efforts of Kyoko, the ice was frozen. Kyoko went home to get colorful silk, which was used as expensive silver carp, and put it into the small hole of the gold plate to make it firm and prevent the ice that had been hard sealed from slipping off. It seems that Kyoko will find a way.
After the children are ready to have fun, they officially start playing various games. When he was ready, he began to knock jade Qing. The whole forest people heard the noise, and the sound of the forest was not as good as the sound of children knocking on jade Qing.
In fact, Kyoko can pour the ice while waiting for the ice to break. Finally, when the ice broke, Kyoko suddenly poured ice. Everyone thought it was the sound of glass breaking on the ground, but it was actually the sound of Kyoko dumping ice on the ground.
Juvenile Ice Making is the work of Yang Wanli, a poet in the Southern Song Dynasty. The four sentences in the whole poem describe a naive and poetic scene of "performing ice" for readers from the psychological characteristics of children's naive love of playing.