Luo Binwang's poems about geese are in pinyin version
yǒng é
t á ng dà i: lu ò b ī n w á ng
Tang Dynasty: Luo Binwang
ī, ī, ī, q ū xi à ng xi à ng ti ā n g ?.
Goose, Goose, Goose, Quxiang Xiang Tiange.
bái máo fú lǜ shuǐ , hóng zhǎng bō qīng bō 。
white hair floats green water, and red palm stirs clear waves.
The full text of ode to Goose explains:
"Goose! Goose! Goose! "
Facing the blue sky, a flock of geese are singing with their necks bent.
Snow-white feathers float on the green water, and the red soles of the feet paddle clear waves, just like boat oars.
Appreciation of full-text ode to Goose:
The first sentence of the poem uses three words "Goose" in succession. The use of this repeated singing method expresses the poet's love for Goose and enhances the emotional effect.
The expression of geese chirping in the second sentence gives people a sense of hearing. The voice of the goose is loud and clear, and the word "qu" makes the image of the goose craning its neck and bending its head to the sky very vivid. This sentence writes what you see first, then what you hear, which is very hierarchical.
The above is about geese marching on land, and the following two sentences are about geese swimming leisurely in the water. The little poet used a set of antithetical sentences to describe the situation of geese swimming in the water from the color aspect. The goose's hair is white, but the river is green. The contrast between "white" and "green" is bright and dazzling, which is a right sentence; Similarly, the goose's web is red, while the water wave is blue, and the "red" and "green" are very gorgeous, which is also true. In the two sentences, "white" and "red" are relative, and "green" and "green" are relative, which is a pair of up and down. In this way, going back and forth is an antithesis, and its wonders are endless.
In this pair of sentences, the verbs are also used properly. The word "floating" means that the goose is carefree and motionless in the water. The word "dial" means that the goose paddles hard in the water, causing waves. In this way, dynamic and static are born together, writing a kind of beauty of change.