The mainland is invisible, only crying.
Bury me in the mountains and see my hometown;
Hometown is intangible and can never be forgotten.
The sky is gray and wild;
Shan Ye, a state-owned ruin.
Looking at the Mainland is Mr. Yu Youren's swan song in his later years. The whole poem is divided into three sections with 56 words * * *, which reflects the old man's love for the patriotic poet Qu Yuan. The last sentence of "national mourning" is to borrow the word "national mourning" in Qu Yuan's "Nine Songs" to express his deep patriotic feelings for the country, and also to express his deep grief at staring at the vast land and returning home. Throughout the poem, his strong desire for cross-strait reunification and his desire to return to the mainland are faintly revealed. It also shows his disappointment that he failed to realize his expectations in his lifetime. What is more painful is that he failed to return to the mainland, to his hometown, to see his old relatives, and to express the voices of countless foreign wanderers.
Yu Youren's Looking at the Mainland is indeed a sad song that shocked the Chinese nation!