Three Chunhui refers to Mengchun, Zhongchun, and Jichun
Three Chunhui refers to Mengchun, Zhongchun, and Jichun. The first month of the lunar calendar is Mengchun, February is Zhongchun, and March is Jichun. It comes from a poet in the Tang Dynasty Meng Jiao's "Wandering Son's Song", the whole poem content is:
The thread in the hands of the loving mother, the clothes on the wandering boy's body.
Before leaving, I am worried that I will return later.
Whoever speaks an inch of grass will be rewarded with three rays of spring.
Translation:
The kind mother, with needle and thread in her hand, rushes to make new clothes for her child who is about to travel far away.
Before leaving, I sewed it stitch by stitch, fearing that my son would come back late and the clothes would be damaged.
Who said that a weak filial piety like Xiaocao could repay the kindness of a loving mother like Chunhui Puze?
Notes:
1. Wanderers: refers to the poet himself and various wanderers who have left their hometown.
2. Pro: will.
3. Fear: worry.
4. Yan: speak.
5. Repay: repay.
6. Three Chunhui: The bright sunshine in spring refers to the kindness of a loving mother.
Appreciation:
This is an ode to maternal love. There are only six lines of thirty words in the whole poem, using the technique of line drawing. By recalling a seemingly ordinary scene of sewing before leaving, it highlights and praises the greatness and selflessness of maternal love, and expresses the poet's gratitude to maternal love and his love for his mother. Deep feelings of love and respect.
The emotion of this poem is sincere and natural. Although there is no painting or carving, it is fresh and smooth, and the simple and plain language contains a rich and mellow poetic flavor. It has been widely recited for thousands of years.
The first two sentences are "The thread in the hands of the loving mother, and the clothes on the wandering son". Two very common things, "thread" and "clothing", are used to closely connect the "loving mother" and "the wandering son", and write The flesh-and-blood relationship between mother and child relying on each other.
The third and fourth sentences, "There is a tight gap before departure, and I am afraid that I will return later", through the action and psychological portrayal of the loving mother rushing to make clothes for the wanderer to go out, deepening this kind of flesh and blood feeling
The mother used thousands of stitches and stitches to sew tightly because she was afraid that her son would not return home "late." Great maternal love is revealed naturally through the details in daily life. The first four sentences are drawn in line without any modification, but the image of the loving mother is truly touching.
The last two sentences, "Whoever speaks an inch of grass will reap three rays of spring light" are the author's direct expression of his heart and his heartfelt praise of maternal love. These two sentences use traditional metaphors: children are like grass, and maternal love is like spring sunshine.
This poem artistically reproduces the ordinary and great human beauty that people feel, so it has won strong praise from countless readers for thousands of years.
Creative background:
"Wandering Son's Song" was written by Meng Jiao in Liyang. The author was homeless in his early years, and it was not until he was fifty that he got a lieutenant in Liyang County. After many years of wandering, he took his mother to live with him. The poet has experienced the harshness of the world and feels that family love is precious, so he wrote this touching poem in praise of his mother.
About the author:
Meng Jiao, (751-814), a poet of the Tang Dynasty. The word is Dongye. Han nationality, a native of Wukang, Huzhou (now Deqing, Zhejiang), his ancestral home is Pingchang (now northeast of Linyi, Shandong), and his ancestors lived in Luoyang (now in Henan).
A famous poet in the Tang Dynasty. There are more than 500 existing poems, among which short five-character ancient poems are the most numerous. The representative work is "Wandering Son's Song". He is known as the "poem prisoner" and is as famous as Jia Dao. He is also known as "the thin island in the suburbs". In the ninth year of Yuanhe, he died of illness in Nengxiang (now Lingbao, Henan). Zhang Ji's private posthumous title is Mr. Zhenyao.