The sentence describing the scenery in Qinyuan Spring Changsha is: Look at the mountains all red, the forests all dyed; the rivers full of green, with hundreds of boats vying to flow.
"Look at the mountains all red, and the forests all dyed." The word "look" leads to seven sentences, describing a colorful autumn scene seen at the head of Independence Orange Island. It is not only a portrayal of the surrounding maple forest like fire, but also embodies the passionate revolutionary feelings of the poet. "Ten thousand mountains are red" is the visual expression of the poet's thought of "a spark that sets a prairie fire on fire" and an optimistic vision for the future of the revolution and the motherland.
Extended information:
"Qinyuanchun·Changsha" is the story of Mao Zedong who left his hometown of Shaoshan in the late autumn of 1925 and went to Guangzhou to host a peasant movement workshop. He passed through Changsha and revisited Made during the Orange Island period. At that time, facing the beautiful and moving natural autumn scenery on the Xiangjiang River, the author recalled the revolutionary situation at that time and wrote this poem.
Through the description of the autumn scenery of Changsha and the memories of the revolutionary struggle life in his youth, the whole poem raises the question of "who is in charge of the ups and downs", and expresses the heroic and fearless revolution of the poet and his comrades in order to transform old China. The spirit, ambition and lofty sentiments implicitly give the answer to "who is in charge of the ups and downs": those who control the fate of the country are the revolutionary youth who take the world as their own responsibility, despise the reactionary rulers, and dare to transform the old world.