Studying hard, trying to break through difficulties and hardships, it is difficult to reward the ambition of the sea, and it is also a heroic move to go abroad for truth.
Original poem:
The great river song turned to the east, and the dense group helped the poor.
Ten years of broken walls, it is difficult to reward the sea and be a hero.
Author: Zhou Enlai
1, "Song of the Great River" turns around. Zhou Enlai used this code here, first to show his heroic ambition, and second to take care of Japanese experience in crossing oceans and rivers. "Turn around and turn east", and turning off the oars indicates a firm choice.
1898 When Liang Qichao was exiled to Japan after the failure of the Reform Movement of 1898, he wrote a poem: "There is Chung Shan Man ahead, turn around and ignore me!"
Zhou Enlai said that studying in Du Dong should also have the spirit of Buddhism, and after graduation, you should break the wall and take off like a dragon. The theory of "breaking the wall" originated from the legend recorded in "Famous Paintings of Past Dynasties", saying that Zhang Sengyou, a famous painter in the Southern Dynasties, painted four dragons without eyes on the wall of anrakuji, Jinling. Once he pointed out the dragon's eyes, and the dragon flew out of the wall.
Zhou Enlai's ingenious combination of "wall-breaking" and "wall-breaking" is not only an artistic creation in rhetoric, but also an extraordinary pursuit of life. "A hero who jumps into the sea is hard to pay" shows that he gave up the heroism of studying abroad for the sake of revolution. "It's hard to get paid for jumping into the sea" means it's hard to get paid for jumping into the sea.