What does "Three million flying jade dragons stir up the cold in the sky" mean?

This sentence means. Thousands of ice edges flew up from your snow-capped body, and the sky was chilled to the bone by you. From "Niannujiao·Kunlun".

"Nian Nujiao·Kunlun" was painted in the winter of 1935. The Central Red Army had completed the last leg of the Long March and was about to arrive in northern Shaanxi. The author climbed to the top of Minshan Mountain and looked at the vast Kunlun Mountains in Qinghai. ?

"Niannujiao·Kunlun" has powerful words and majestic momentum. It is written using an artistic technique that combines description, lyricism, and discussion. There are both realistic descriptions of the towering and majestic Kunlun Mountains, as well as the romantic "Flying Three Million Jade Dragons", which is rich in imagination and extreme exaggeration, and is endowed with profound symbolic meaning.

Extended information:

Appreciation of Works

The first half describes the magnificence of Kunlun Mountain from winter to summer, the severe cold in winter and the flood disaster in summer , merits and demerits, who has ever commented. The poet here uses Kunlun to symbolize the motherland, and comments on the merits and demerits of the history of the motherland from a high level.

The momentum is smooth and has the feeling of traveling thousands of miles. From the elephant to the object, there are detailed descriptions. "Flying all over the sky" are two sentences, just as the author said, this sentence is used to describe the snow-capped mountains. This sentence is used cleverly, naturally and accurately.

There is also the sentence "people may be fish and turtles", the image is abrupt, like a strange metaphor in surrealist poetry, referring to the fact that the rivers and lakes flowing down from Kunlun in summer have overflowed and caused disasters. At the same time, it also alludes to the dark cloud of China’s old society.

Then he boldly asked: "Who has ever commented on the merits and crimes of Qianqiu?"