Yesenin's Night Full Text

Two foreign poems - Appreciation of Ye Sening's "Night"

Night The river flows quietly into the dreamland,

The dark pine forest loses its noise.

The song of the nightingale has fallen silent,

The long-legged rails no longer shout for joy.

When night comes, everything is quiet.

Only the gentle singing of the stream can be heard.

The bright moon casts its light.

Cover everything around you with silver.

There are thousands of silver stars in the river,

The silver waves in the creek are slightly rippling.

The green grass on the waterlogged field

also shines with silver light.

When night comes, there is silence everywhere,

Nature is immersed in sleep.

The bright moon spreads its brilliance,

covering everything around it with silver.

About the author Yesenin is known as a "genius country singer" in Russia and is one of the founders of Soviet poetry. He was born in a farming family in Ryazan Province in 1895. Like Duncan, he was also a child of an unfortunate family. When he was a child, his father suspected his mother of being unfaithful, which led to their separation and neglect of Yesenin. Yesenin was raised by his grandparents, so he sometimes felt like an orphan. As a teenager, Yesenin was not keen on playing and poetry. He was a passionate seed and naturally loved women. Around the age of 15, he fell in love with Anna, the sister of a friend, and even dreamed of marrying her when he grew up. Later, he had a relationship with another country girl, Maria Barzamova. In 1913, in a printing factory in Moscow, Yesenin met the young girl Anna Izryadlova, and soon they lived together. In early 1915, their son Yuri was born, and Yesenin became a father when he was just 19 years old. But a few months later, he left the woman with whom he lived and his son, left Moscow, and set off for Petersburg, where he officially entered the poetry world.

About the author

Yesenin is known as a "genius country singer" in Russia and is one of the founders of Soviet poetry. He was born in a farming family in Ryazan Province in 1895. Like Duncan, he was also a child of an unfortunate family. When he was a child, his father suspected his mother of being unfaithful, which led to their separation and neglect of Yesenin. Yesenin was raised by his grandparents, so he sometimes felt like an orphan. As a teenager, Yesenin was not keen on playing and poetry. He was a passionate seed and naturally loved women. Around the age of 15, he fell in love with Anna, the sister of a friend, and even dreamed of marrying her when he grew up. Later, he had a relationship with another country girl Maria?6?1 Barzamova. In 1913, in a printing factory in Moscow, Yesenin met the young girl Anna Izryadlova, and soon they lived together. In early 1915, their son Yuri was born, and Yesenin became a father when he was just 19 years old. But a few months later, he left the woman with whom he lived and his son, left Moscow, and set off for Petersburg, where he officially entered the poetry world.

Appreciation

This little poem focuses on showing the tranquility and beauty of the night, conveying the poet's love for nature and his comfortable and peaceful state of mind.

The night scene in the poem is quiet and beautiful.

The first stanza of the poem describes the silence of the night. As night falls, all things in nature fall into silence: the calm river seems to quietly fall asleep, the pine forest no longer sounds, the nightingale stops singing, and the rails no longer cry.

The second stanza is written in the silence of the night, with the gurgling stream singing softly. This uses movement to contrast the stillness and make it even more tranquil. Then from hearing to vision, the image of moonlight is evoked to describe the beauty of the night: the silver light of the bright moon quietly falls on the earth, and everything around is bathed in the moonlight.

The third stanza further describes the beauty of nature under the moonlight: rivers, streams, and green grass on flooded fields. All shining in the moonlight. The fourth stanza returns to the tranquility of the night, and once again writes about the beautiful moonlight. This repeated chanting creates the rhythmic beauty and melody of the poem, deepening the quiet and beautiful atmosphere of the night.