What is the explanation for the idyllic excitement of the four seasons?

Four seasons pastoral miscellaneous interest

Pastoral Miscellanies of Four Seasons (I) is an idyllic poem written by Fan Chengda, a poet in the Southern Song Dynasty, and it is also one of his family poems, Pastoral Miscellanies of Sixty Seasons.

Creation time Southern Song Dynasty

Poem "Sixty Pastoral Poems of Four Seasons"

Four Seasons Pastoral Miscellaneous Notes, One Four Seasons Pastoral Miscellaneous Notes, 254 Seasons Pastoral Miscellaneous Notes, Come out during the day and perform at night, Horse Four Seasons Pastoral Miscellaneous Notes, Ancient Poems, Four Seasons Pastoral Miscellaneous Notes, 3 1 season Pastoral Miscellaneous Notes, 254 Seasons Pastoral Miscellaneous Notes, 3 1 Fan Chengda Four Seasons Pastoral Miscellaneous Notes, Stay in the store, new city, and feel the autumn night is broken.

original work

Song-Fan Chengda

During the day, weeding in the fields and rubbing hemp thread at home at night, the men and women in the village took on all the housework. Although the children don't plow and weave, they also learn a kind of melon in the shade of mulberry trees.

To annotate ...

1. Miscellaneous interest: a poem written at will, with no fixed theme. 2. Day (zhòu): daytime. 3. Field: weed control. 4. Performing hemp: Twist hemp into a line.

5, do their job: everyone has a certain job. 6. Children and grandchildren: refers to children. 7. Unsolved: I don't understand. 8. Provide: engage and participate.

9. Next: Close. 10. Mulberry shade: a shady place under mulberry trees.

poetic sentiment

Go out to mow the grass in the field during the day and come back to rub the hemp rope at night. Both men and women on the farm carry the burden at home. Children don't know how to cultivate, but they also plant melons under mulberry trees like adults.

Make an appreciative comment

Pastoral Miscellanies of Four Seasons is a group of large-scale family poems written by the poet after he retired from his hometown. There are 60 poems in total, which describe the rural scenery and farmers' life in spring, summer, autumn and winter, and also reflect the exploitation and hardship of farmers. This is one of them, which describes a scene of rural summer life.

The first sentence says: weeding in the fields during the day and rubbing hemp thread at night. "Tillage" means weeding. In early summer, the seedlings need weeding. This is what men should do. "Ji Ma" refers to women who rub twine and weave cloth at night after doing other work during the day. This sentence directly wrote the labor scene. In the second sentence, "children in the village mind their own business", "children" refers to men and women, and the whole poem uses the tone of an old farmer, and "children" refers to young people. "Being in charge" means that both men and women are not allowed to be idle and mind their own business. In the third sentence, "children and grandchildren are not prepared to farm and weave", and "children and grandchildren" refer to those children who can neither farm nor weave, but are not idle. They have been in contact with and love labor since childhood, so they "learn to grow melons by mulberry shade", that is, they learn to grow melons under the lush mulberry trees. This is a common phenomenon in rural areas, but it is quite distinctive. The conclusion shows the naive interest of rural children.

With a fresh style, the poet described the tense labor atmosphere in the early summer in the countryside in a more delicate way, which made it interesting to read.

Pastoral Miscellanies of Four Seasons (I) is an idyllic poem written by Fan Chengda, a poet in the Southern Song Dynasty, and it is also one of his family poems, Pastoral Miscellanies of Sixty Seasons.