Poems of rural children

1. Clear ponds and jade waters surround the mountains and rivers, and we join hands with friends to fly kites. Yangliu pointed lightly to get drunk, and it was suspected that the dream brought back childhood. --Xuan Zhiweng of the Qing Dynasty

2. The eaves are low and the grass is green on the stream. In the drunkenness, Wu Yin is very charming. Who is the old lady with gray hair? The eldest son is hoeing beans to the east of the stream, and the middle son is weaving chicken coops. What I like most is when my child dies, lying down at the head of the stream and peeling lotus pods. -- Xin Qiji of the Song Dynasty, "Qing Ping Le Village Dwelling"

3. Farming in the daytime and planting hemp at night, the children of the village are each responsible for their own affairs. The children and grandchildren are still working for farming and weaving, and they are also learning to grow melons near the mulberry tree. --Fan Chengda's "Pastoral Miscellany in Four Seasons"

4. When the weather is clear, the wind, moon, and rain have dried up, the grass is full of flowers, the dike is full of water, and the stream is full of water. The boy Liu Yinmian was sleeping, and a cow ate Liu Yinxi. --Seventh of "Eight Poems in the Mulberry Tea Tunnel" by Yang Wanli of the Song Dynasty

Children's poems express the unique purity, innocence and childlike interest of children. Successful children's poems are almost always full of children's interest. For example, Bing Xin's "After the Rain" tells the story of a brother who slipped in a puddle after a summer rain. He said "Oh no," but his face was full of pride and pride. The younger sister, who was following closely behind her brother, walked carefully while holding up her skirt, but in her heart she hoped to fall like this. The poet captures the poetry in children's life scenes, making the innocent and childish behavior shine with alluring splendor.