What are the poems describing farmers transplanting rice?

This poem named "Song of Transplanting" shows the busyness of transplanting rice. Transplanting is related to the harvest, so we must not delay time. So at this time, men and women, old and young, came to Tiantou together, doing their jobs, and did not dare to slack off. Three or four sentences show the hardships of transplanting rice seedlings through the description of rain gear and rain conditions. The weather is not very good, and it rains repeatedly, so the farmers and couples who are transplanting rice seedlings have to put on their hats and tie hemp fibers. Here, the author compares "hat" to helmet and "hemp fiber" to armor, not only for seeking change and innovation, but also for suggesting that transplanting rice seedlings is a tense battle, and farmers' children are fighting against the sky and the earth like fully armed soldiers. At the same time, the overlap of the two figurative metaphors has turned stagnation into flying, which has produced the momentum of "lively splash" praised by predecessors.

"The rain showered from head to shoulder", and the rain was very fierce. Although wearing a "helmet" and "armor", but still soaked. It's hard to imagine in such a bad climate. "Farming time waits for no one" is of course the main reason for his hard work in the rain, but the spirit of farmers' hard work has also been fully demonstrated. By describing the dialogue between farmers and couples and the modality in the process of dialogue, the five to eight sentences further show the diligence of farmers and the tension of farming. The first four sentences show readers a vivid picture with simple language and simple painting. In the last four sentences, the author not only continues to dye the active peasant couple in the picture, but also gives it an audible voice-over. "Call the canal to rest for a while" means that the peasant woman calls the peasant woman to rest and go to eat. "Eat in the morning" pointed out that farmers get up early and go out to work, and have not touched water and rice until now. It shows that farming has been extremely tense. "Bowing his head and bending his back is just not answering" is the farmer's reaction: he still maintains the posture of transplanting rice, and his hands and feet are constantly busy, as if there is no time to look up. Here, "just don't pick up" doesn't mean that he turned a deaf ear to the peasant woman's call and said nothing, but that he didn't agree with the peasant woman's request for a "rest". In fact, the farmer separated the peasant woman with other topics. "Take care of geese and ducks if the seedlings are not firmly twisted" is the farmer's answer. The implication is that farmers have no time to rest at this juncture. Although the words are short, the meaning is clear. At the same time, the farmer also told his wife to take good care of the ducklings raised at home and beware of their internship in the field.