1. Plants: pumpkin, cucumber, corn, etc. They are all their own masters, free and happy, unconstrained, and grow up by their own temperament. People don't interfere in their affairs, and Sun doesn't ask.
For example:
1), pumpkins are willing to climb shelves and houses. Cucumber blossoms when it wants to, and bears melons when it wants to. I don't agree, even melons can't knot, flowers can't bloom, and no one asks. Corn can grow as high as it wants, and nobody cares if it wants to grow in the sky.
It fully expresses the freedom and freedom of plants.
This elm tree is in the northwest corner of the garden. When the wind comes, the elms call first. When it rains, elms smoke first. As soon as the sun comes out, the leaves of elm trees shine. They shine like mussels on the beach.
In poetic language, the author vividly outlines the height and vitality of the old elm.
2. Animals (Kun is a tapeworm should be more appropriate): write everything alive and do whatever you want. Whatever you want, you are free.
For example, there are bees, butterflies, dragonflies and grasshoppers in this garden. Butterflies include white butterflies and yellow butterflies. This kind of butterfly is very small and not very beautiful. The beautiful butterfly is red and covered with gold powder. Dragonflies are golden and grasshoppers are green. The bee buzzed, covered in fluff, and landed on a flower, chubby and round, just like a small fur ball, and stopped motionless on it.
What a fairy tale! When writing about small insects, the author not only pays attention to their colors-"white, yellow, red, gold and green", but also carefully observes the appearance and posture of bees, which makes your eyes bright and beautiful at once.
In Grandfather's Garden, the author wrote about the freedom of insects and plants, in fact, in order to set off the author's free childhood life in the garden and express his nostalgia for his loving grandfather and childhood life.