An analysis of ancient Chilean poems and songs

Every sentence in the ancient Chilean poems is explained as follows:

On the Chilechuan Plain, under the steep shady mountain, the sky is like a huge yurt, covering the vast Yuan Ye in all directions. The sky is gray and the earth is vast, and the wind blows across the grass and bows its head, suddenly showing a group of fat cattle and sheep.

Original: Chilechuan, under the shady mountain, the sky is like a vault, and the cage covers four fields. The sky is wild, and the wind and grass are moving to see cattle and sheep.

This song has a distinct nomadic color and a strong grassland flavor. From language to artistic conception, it can be said that it is natural, its quality is straightforward and simple, and its meaning is really pure. There are no obscure sentences in the language, which express the heroic feelings of nomadic people in a simple and vivid way.

Overall evaluation:

This folk song brilliantly depicts the vast and magnificent grassland in the northern part of the motherland at that time. The first four sentences praise the living environment of the Chilean people, and the last three sentences write about the working life of the Chilean people. The whole poem has a broad realm, majestic tone, clear language and strong artistic generalization.

"Chilechuan, under the Yinshan Mountain", the poem begins with a high-pitched tone and sings the natural characteristics of the north, which is unobstructed and boundless. When Zile people sing about the land where they live, it is based on a magnificent mountain.

These concise six words are bold and unconstrained in style, showing great momentum and strength. "The sky is like the sky, and the cage covers four fields." These two sentences come from the background above, saying that the picture is magnificent and the Amano is magnificent.