How many pictures have been written in the poem "Three Blacks and the Land"?

Poetry shows four pictures.

Subtitle:

1, happily purchased;

2. labor scene;

3. What you have seen and heard;

4. Imagine the future.

Three Blacks and the Land is a modern poem, which is selected from Selected Poems of Su Jinsan. This poem reproduces the joy of farmers represented by "three blacks" after recovering their land. It expresses farmers' love for the land and their yearning for a better life in the future.

Text segmentation:

The first part (section 1-3): Love the land all the time. Farmers who own land are extremely happy and regard land as a part of their lives.

The second part (section 4-8): Intensive cultivation. Sanhei is extremely happy to intensively cultivate, and at the same time highlights the hard work of Sanhei.

The third part (section 9- 14): a beautiful vision. Sanhei is full of hope for a better life tomorrow.

Part IV (section 15): Heart is as sweet as honey. Sanhei raked the ground happily.

Extended data

Analysis of Sentences in Three Blacks and the Land;

1. Once farmers have land, they will devote their whole lives to it. Just like a wild goose in a dry day, as soon as it sees water, it dives into the water with its head and tail.

Analysis: This sentence dominates the whole text, and vividly shows the farmers' urgent mood in the face of the land and their excited behavior in the embrace of the land by using figurative rhetoric.

2. This is how Sanhei turned over. From east to west, from south to north, every inch of land was turned up and every piece of soil was finely broken.

Analysis: The author adopts the writing technique of summarizing first and then concrete. First, he wrote a summary of "turning over the soil with three evils", and then around this meaning, he expressed the appearance of "turning over the soil with three evils" from different angles in concise language, expressing his cherish and love for this land.

3. Three black rakes are lying on the ground and sit down to have a rest. I saw that the buckwheat I planted had blossomed and was as white as snow.

Analysis: this sentence shows that Sanhei is eager for a bumper harvest. He seemed to see a blooming buckwheat flower, emphasizing that land is the hope of farmers.

4. Sanhei squatted on the ground and thought: The person who turned over is really sweet. He laughed so hard that he couldn't even close his mouth. The grasshoppers in the field also called more joyfully.

Analysis: echoing the beginning, highlighting the joy of turning over.