"Before the mulberry leaves fall, their leaves will flourish" —— Comparing the beautiful face of a woman with the moist and bright mulberry leaves. On the other hand, it is a metaphor for a man's exuberance when mulberry leaves are flourishing.
"Mulberry has fallen, but it has fallen yellow"-a metaphor for women's haggard and abandonment through the withered and yellow fall of mulberry leaves. From green mulberry leaves to yellow mulberry leaves, it not only shows the age of women from prosperity to decline, but also implies the passage of time. On the other hand, it means a decline in men's goodwill.
"In xi, where pigeons are picked, mulberries without food; If you are a woman, you will not worry with the scholar "-Mulberry tastes sweet, and it is easy to get drunk if you eat too much;" "For example, love is beautiful, and spoony people are easily deceived. Men can get rid of their obsession with love, but once women fall in love, they can't get rid of it. What a painful language this is!
The expression of "xing": "xing" is what Zhu said, that is, "people who are interested should talk about other things first to cause words to be recited" "Xing" means "Qi", which is the token of family affection, sustenance and association. Its function is implicit and profound, and it is inexhaustible. Some emotions are easily exhausted if expressed directly. Entrusting emotions in images will make readers unconsciously infected from images, which will have endless effects. For example, "I have been there, Yangliuyiyi; Today, when I think about it, it is raining (The Book of Songs Xiaoya Cai Wei). If you give up the scenery, it's just "spring when you go, winter when you come back". What's the point?
The third and fourth chapters in "Self-protection"-these two chapters are mainly lyrical, and the poems are all about mulberry trees, from the poet's youth and beauty to his decline, and at the same time reveal the process of men's love for her from rejection. "Before the mulberry leaves fall, their leaves will flourish", using moist and bright mulberry leaves as a metaphor for a woman's beautiful face. "Mulberry has fallen, but it has fallen yellow", which is a metaphor for women's haggard and abandonment with the withered and yellow leaves of mulberry leaves.