The writing order of "Looking at Tianmen Mountain": Write Tianmen Mountain in the order from far to near, and then from near to far.
Full text: Tianmen interrupts the opening of Chujiang River, and the clear water flows eastwards until this point. ?The green hills on both sides of the strait stand out from each other, and a solitary sail comes from the sun.
Translation: Tianmen Mountain broke in the middle because the Chu River broke it open, and the clear water rushed eastwards and turned back here. Towering green mountains on both sides of the river stand opposite each other across the Yangtze River, and a lone boat on the river looks like it is sailing from the sun.
"Looking at Tianmen Mountain" is a poem composed by the great poet Li Bai of the Tang Dynasty when he visited Tianmen Mountain on his way to Jiangdong in the 13th year of Kaiyuan (725).
This poem describes the scene of the poet boating down the river and looking at Tianmen Mountain in the distance: the first two sentences use a narrative method to describe the majesty of Tianmen Mountain and the mighty rushing momentum of the river; the last two sentences describe the The distant view seen from the gap between the green mountains on both sides of the Taiwan Strait shows a kind of dynamic beauty.
Extended information:
"The green mountains on both sides of the strait come out facing each other, and the lone sail comes from the sun." These two sentences are an inseparable whole. The third sentence follows the first sentence and describes the majesty of the Tianmen Mountains seen in the gaze; the fourth sentence follows the previous sentence and writes the distant view of the Yangtze River, reminding the foothold of "looking" and expressing the poet's vivid excitement.
The poet is not standing somewhere on the shore looking at Tianmen Mountain in the distance. The foothold of his "looking" is "a lonely sail" coming from "the edge of the sun". Most people who read this poem appreciate the word "chu" in "The green mountains on both sides of the Taiwan Strait come out relative to each other" because it brings dynamic beauty to the originally motionless mountain belt, but few consider why the poet feels "relatively out". .