Appreciation of "Pedestrians on the Road Want to Kill the Soul": First of all, "Pedestrians" are people who travel outside, and "pedestrians" are not equal to "tourists", not people who travel in spring. "Soul" is not the soul of "three souls and seven spirits". In poetry, "soul" mainly refers to spiritual and emotional things. "Soul-breaking" refers to trying to describe the feelings hidden in the heart, which are very strong, but not clearly expressed outside, such as love, disappointment, dark sorrow and deep hatred for acacia. When poets have such emotions, they often like to use the word "broken soul" to express their feelings.
Secondly, Tomb-Sweeping Day is a big festival with rich colors and emotional appeal. It should be family reunion, or sightseeing, or sweeping graves. This is the main etiquette and custom. An emotional poet has a very complicated taste in his heart. If he catches up with a lonely trip and feels sad, it will be easier to stir his thoughts and catch up with one drizzle after another, and his spring shirt will be wet, adding another layer of sadness to pedestrians.
Extended data:
Don? Du Mu
It rains in succession during the Qingming Festival.
Pedestrians on the road want to die.
Excuse me, where is the restaurant?
The shepherd boy just laughed and didn't answer Xingshan Village.
This day is Tomb-Sweeping Day. The poet Xiao Du happened to get caught in the rain during his trip. Qingming, although it is a season of blooming green flowers and bright spring, is also a period when the climate is prone to change, and sometimes even "windy and rainy". However, the rain in Mao Mao on this day is the kind of rain that "sounds like the crisp rain in the sky"-this is also the characteristic of spring rain. This song "After the Rain" conveys the sad and beautiful realm of "bleak and deceives flowers, and a dark willow blooms in another village"
[Introduction to the author]
Du Mu (803-852) was born in Tang Jingzhao (now Xi, Shaanxi). Fan Chuan Villa, who lived in the south of Chang 'an in his later years, was later called "Du Fanchuan". (Source: Qingming-Baidu Encyclopedia? )