Family Warm Poems in The Book of Songs

The warm poem about home in the Book of Songs is that a man's son will go back to his home and he will stay at home.

The "Yi Shi family" in The Book of Songs comes from "It's time for my son to go home" in Guo Feng Nan Zhou Yao Tao, which means that the girl is getting married and happily returns to her husband's family. Appropriateness means harmony and goodwill. Family: Family refers to the husband's family. The following "home" and "family" refer to the husband's family.

Interpretation: Peach blossoms are in full bloom, with bright colors and red as fire. The girl is getting married and going back to her husband's house in high spirits. Peach blossoms are in full bloom and fruits are numerous, big and numerous. The girl is getting married, having children early and having a prosperous heir. Peach blossoms are in full bloom, green leaves are lush and never fall. This girl is getting married, and Qi Xinhui will help her family get along in harmony.

Details are as follows:

This is a poem to congratulate a young girl on her marriage. From peach blossom to peach fruit, and then to peach leaf, it changed three times, outlining the prosperity of a group of married men and women. The ancients skillfully combined the external beauty like peach blossom with the proper internal goodness, expressing people's beautiful yearning for a harmonious and happy family life.

The whole poem is divided into three chapters. The first chapter compares the youthful charm of the bride with the bright peach blossoms. "Peach flies away" begins with colorful symbolic meaning, and the exquisite peach blossoms that hit the face give the poem a strong sense of color. "Burn out its splendor", it can be said that the peach blossom has reached the extreme, and the beauty can be harsh.

Judging from the relationship between metaphor ontology and metaphor, what is written here is fresh and tender peach blossoms, which are blooming one after another. At the moment, the newly-dressed bride is both excited and shy, and her cheeks are flushed, which really shows the charm of two phases. There are both descriptions of scenery and characters in the poem, and the scene blends with each other, setting off a happy and warm atmosphere. This kind of scene can be seen even at today's rural wedding.

The second chapter is to express my wishes after marriage. Peach blossoms bear fruit naturally. The poet said that peach trees are full of fruits, and the peaches are fat and big, which symbolizes that the bride has a baby early and her children and grandchildren are full. The third chapter wishes the bride's family prosperity with lush peach leaves. Peach tree branches are fruitful, and the peach trees are shaded from the sun, symbolizing the happiness of the newly married bride after marriage.