The image meaning of strokes in ancient poetry

The image of brushstrokes in classical poetry

1. Entrust the homesickness to the wind and express the homesickness.

Nalanxingde's Sauvignon Blanc

Mountain is a journey, and water is a journey. I want to go to Guan Yu. Night light. When the wind changes and the snow changes, it is impossible to break the dream of hometown, and there is no such sound in the garden.

The first paragraph of the word describes the hardships and twists and turns of the journey, which is far and long. The following film expresses Nalan's deep attachment and nostalgia for his hometown. "The wind is changing, the snow is changing" describes the desolate and cold Great Wall, and the snowstorm keeps going all night, suggesting that the poet is deeply tired of the stormy road of life, describing his homesickness and expressing his deep affection. The whole word is written with natural, true, simple and refreshing lines, which are natural and muddy, without carving, but particularly real and touching.

Liu Linjiang bid farewell

There is no wine in the army to comfort you, and you are ashamed of the jade bottle in the sand head.

The pommel horse has been on the north-south road for several years, and the river has been closed for a long time.

The good wind makes the guests sad, and the waning moon wakes up in the curtain.

The dream is broken, the mountain people are gone, and the river is green.

This poem not only truly reflects and highly summarizes the life of the poem in four directions, but also shows the true temperament of the poet. When the night wind strikes, lonely guests wake up and can no longer dream of going home. What a sad feeling it is, but as far as Good Wind is concerned, it is in sharp contrast with the state of mind, which makes readers feel a touch of homesickness and homesickness. Although the whole poem is not emotional, it is long and meaningful.

Second, the wind plays up the sad atmosphere and sets off the sad feelings.

Guan Hanqing's Song of Virtue

The wind is blowing and the rain is falling. I can't sleep in Chen Tuan. I was annoyed and hurt my arm, and I was in tears. Children in Qiu Chan are noisy and cold, and the drizzle is beating bananas.

This song describes the inner feelings of the characters with autumn sounds, and describes the troubles caused by the heroine's nostalgia for distant people. "The wind is floating and the rain is falling", which means that the wind and rain are mixed, sudden and aggressive, which brings great pressure to the fragile young woman. "Piaopiao" and "Xiaoxiao" are two tones, which are long and empty. The whole song was written by autumn scenery and ended with autumn scenery. It consists of things and people, as well as people and things in the middle. Scenes blend, euphemism is found in straightforwardness, which greatly improves the artistic appeal.

Li Qingzhao's "Drunken Flowers"

The mist is thick and the clouds are thick, and the days are sad. Kapoor is among the birds in the incense burner. The festival is also a double ninth festival, and the jade pillow gauze kitchen is half cold at night. Dongli drinks until dusk, and faint chrysanthemum fragrance overflows his sleeves. Mo Tao doesn't forget me, the curtain rolls west wind, and people are thinner than yellow flowers.

This word describes the scene of the author drinking and enjoying chrysanthemums on the Double Ninth Festival, which sets off a desolate and lonely atmosphere and expresses the loneliness of the author missing her husband. On the film, chant festival, write don't worry; The next movie is about appreciating chrysanthemums. In the description of natural scenery, the author adds his own strong emotional color, which makes the objective environment blend with the inner feelings of the characters. In particular, the phrase "Don't get carried away, the curtain rolls west wind, and people are thinner than yellow flowers" has been widely used to render a sad and sad atmosphere. "Yellow flowers" is a metaphor for people's haggard, and "thinness" implies the depth of lovesickness.

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