Who is the author of "Feelings of Plants" in Grade Three?

Shu ting, the emotion of plants

1: First of all, the poet negates the totally dependent view of love with figurative metaphor. "Climb the Campbell flower. Because both "tall branches" and "spoony birds" depend on the shade. Without tall branches and shade, they have no place to live. Not to mention "showing off" and "singing". Secondly, the poet used parallelism to deny the pure dedication of love. Spring blindly sends out "cool comfort", dangerous peaks set off your dignity, and sunshine, giving all the light and heat, and spring rain, which only moistens each other's hearts ... These are the single dedication of one party to the other, but they can't get the warmth they deserve: both of these love views are based on the premise of sacrificing one party for love, and they are the hidden thoughts that men are superior to women in the long feudal society. The poet expressed his unquestionable attitude with parallelism and unwavering negative words. When denying the dependent view of love, the poet used "never like" and "never learn"; When the poet denied the dedication of love, he used "not just like", "not just like" and "no, these are not enough".

2:

1, roots, firmly rooted in the ground, leaves, lingering in the clouds. Every time a gust of wind blows, we greet each other, but no one is there.

Understand our words

What poets want is such great love, the same greatness and nobility, the same thoughts and soul, rooted in the same foundation, sharing weal and woe, and being dependent on each other in cold and warm.

Poetry expresses the poet's ideal view of love with novel and magnificent images and appropriate metaphors. The metaphor and peculiar image combination in the poem represented the new form of poetry at that time, which was of groundbreaking significance. In addition, although novel images are used in poetry, the language of poetry is not obscure, but colloquial, with fresh aura and subtle hints in novelty, giving people unlimited imagination. Roots, clinging to the ground, "refers to life, supporting each other.

"Leaves, touch in the clouds." It refers to the exchange of ideas and mutual understanding.

"Root" is meat, "leaf" is spirit. If you look at it this way, "grip" and "touch" are not interchangeable.

2. The poet compares the cold wave, snowstorm and thunder and lightning to the sufferings in life, and compares fog, clouds and rainbows to the joys in life. Both sides share joys and sorrows, and they are happy.