The Significance of Jin Meiling's "This Road"

Jin Meiling (1903- 1930) was a Japanese nursery rhyme poet who was active in the 1920s. From small to large, misfortune has been accompanied by Admiralty. At the age of three, my father died young and my mother remarried according to local customs. At the age of 23, she married a bookstore clerk and gave birth to a daughter, but her husband not only made love, but also forbade her to write poems. Jin Meiling, who was in pain, filed for divorce, thinking that he could get rid of it. Unexpectedly, however, after the divorce, her daughter was also sentenced to be taken away from her, which made her completely desperate for life. 1930, a poet who was only 27 years old committed suicide. His works were once forgotten by the world. 1984, Jin Meiling's three handwritten nursery rhymes were compiled into The Complete Works of Jin Meiling Nursery Rhymes, which shocked the Japanese literary world and everyone who read the poems. So far, many of Jin Meiling's representative works have been included in Japanese primary school Putonghua textbooks, and her works have been translated into seven languages, including English, French and Korean. In 2007, Towards the Light was published in China. This road

(Jin Meiling)

At the end of this road,

There will be a large forest.

Lonely Pu Shu,

Let's go this way.

At the end of this road,

There will be a vast ocean.

Frogs in the lotus pond,

Let's go this way.

At the end of this road,

There will be a prosperous city.

Lonely scarecrow,

Let's go this way.

At the end of this road,

There must be something.

Let's go together,

Let's go this way. At first glance, the language of this poem is very simple, and the artistic conception is also very common. However, if you go deep into it and enter the ethereal ideological realm of the author to touch and feel, you will find that this poem is not so simple, but popular, profound and beautiful. What must be the end of this road? (Gold coins, knowledge, garlands, trophies, candy, saxophone ...)

You have whatever you want, and you have whatever you want. As long as we are willing to go this way.

If you invite now, who will you invite there? Poetry presents us with a child who is full of yearning for life and the future and has a strong desire to explore. He tried to think that there must be something in the outside world that he could think of but didn't see. You see, although he is in his own small world, how much he loves his life! He is also full of great love for nature. She warmly invited Pu Shu, Frog and Scarecrow to go to the outside world and realize their dreams. That's the road before us, the road I yearn for in my heart. The tree is lonely, the frog is lonely, the scarecrow is humble, and everyone has never seen the world ... The little girl is kind, enthusiastic and impulsive. So, everything around us, everything in nature, let's go, let's go to the outside world! Our loneliness, loneliness and clumsiness will cease to exist.