The first half of Mao Zedong's "Seven Laws: The People's Liberation Army Occupy Nanking" says that "the right path on earth is vicissitudes", and the original text of the whole poem is as follows:
Zhongshan is windy and rainy, and millions of heroes cross the river.
Tiger's dragon card is better than in the past, upside down and generous.
It is advisable to chase after the poor bandits with the remaining courage, not to learn from the overlord.
If the sky is sentimental, it will grow old, and the right way in the world is vicissitudes.
The storm of revolution shook Nanjing, the capital of the Chiang family dynasty. The People's Liberation Army broke through the natural barrier of the Yangtze River with millions of heroes and went straight to Nanjing, the base area where Chiang fought hard for three and a half months. Nanjing, an ancient capital famous for its grandeur and precipitousness, has returned to the hands of the people. It is more beautiful than before. This earth-shaking change is enough to make people sing generously and rejoice.
We should take advantage of this good opportunity to pursue the remnants of the enemy and liberate all of China. Don't learn from Xiang Yu, the overlord who established separatist forces on the south bank of the Yangtze River. If nature has knowledge, it will abide by the unchangeable law of ups and downs. Constant variation, development and progress are the inevitable laws of the development of human society.
The second half of the sentence comes from Jiangnan Spring written by Du Mu, a poet in the Tang Dynasty. The full text of the original poem is as follows:
Jiangnan, the sound of green and red flowers, the waterside village in the foothills. ?
More than 480 ancient temples were left in the Southern Dynasties, and countless pagodas were shrouded in wind and rain.
Interpretation of vernacular Chinese: Birds sing in the south of the Yangtze River, green grass and red flowers set each other off, and wine flags are flying everywhere in the foothills of waterside villages. There are more than 480 ancient temples left over from the Southern Dynasties, and countless terraces are shrouded in wind, smoke, clouds and rain.
Extended data
The right way in the world is vicissitudes of life, but what was originally written was the liberation of Nanjing, and great changes have taken place in China. The People's Liberation Army won the three major battles of Liaoshen and Huaihai Peace Gold. Millions of mighty men crossed the Yangtze River and occupied Nanjing, the seat of the Kuomintang central government. The liberation of Nanjing marked the complete collapse of the Kuomintang regime in the mainland.
This sentence is the last sentence, revealing that constant revolution, constant reform and continuous progress are the inevitable laws of human development. Mao Zedong borrowed it to write this poem, giving it a new meaning: the four seasons of nature change and run endlessly, which makes the metabolism of everything in the world never stop, which conforms to the development law of objective things. Constant development, constant revolution and reform are the normal laws of human society.
And "four hundred and eighty halls in the southern dynasties, how many towers are misty and rainy." It is a highly generalized brush stroke, which outlines the scenery of Jiangnan and depicts the beautiful and foggy spring scenery in Jiangnan. There are hundreds of Buddhist temples left over from the Southern Dynasties. These resplendent Buddhist temples with heavy buildings are shrouded in misty rain, adding a hazy and blurred color to the spring in the south of the Yangtze River.