The ordinary world that Tian Xiaoxia said on the railway.

Tian Xiaoxia said on the railway: We used to be free-flying birds, so fly! Fly to the bright mountain behind the dark clouds, fly there, go to the blue cape. Only the wind is dancing, and there is my company.

This sentence comes from Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin's The Prisoner. This poem was written by the poet during his exile in the south. On one occasion, Pushkin clashed with local dignitaries. Governor Inzov put Pushkin under house arrest for two weeks to save his influence. At that time, Pushkin lived on the first floor of the governor's office. The room was dark and damp, and the iron guardrail was nailed to the window, which made Pushkin feel like he was in a prison. There is a young eagle guarding the governor in the mansion, and its claws are firmly tied by chains. This caused the poet's anxiety and association: two lives that were originally free have now lost their freedom. Eagle, originally the darling of the sky and the sea, is now only fed by others, and is only a gloomy companion of prisoners all day long. How pathetic! However, the poet did not stop at describing the dilemma. From the second verse of the poem, the tone becomes brighter and brighter. The understanding eagle described by the poet called the prisoner with his eyes and cried, "We are free birds, fly away", breaking through the layers of dark clouds and flying to the beautiful mountains and the blue cape!

Tian Xiaoxia is the heroine of Lu Yao's novel Ordinary World. She was a provincial journalist and died in the flood. Tian Xiaoxia is the daughter of senior official Tian Fujun and the girlfriend of miner Sun Shaoping. He is an ideal figure in Lu Yao's works.