Xugongdian, Suxin City, Song Dynasty·Yang Wanli?
The fence is sparse and one foot deep, and the flowers on the tree heads have not yet formed shade. The children hurriedly chased the yellow butterfly, which flew into the cauliflower and was nowhere to be found. ?
General idea:
The fences are sparse, a path leads to the distance, the petals on the trees are falling one after another, but the shade has not yet formed.
The child ran quickly to catch up with the yellow butterfly, but the butterfly suddenly flew into the cauliflower bush and was never found again.
This is a poem describing the rural scenery in late spring, depicting a scene full of spring. In addition to using the writing method of combining movement and stillness, this poem also uses line drawing techniques, which is easy, natural and vivid. The first two sentences describe rural scenery, which are static descriptions; the last two sentences, which describe children and butterflies, are dynamic descriptions. The first two sentences highlight the happy and innocent background of children catching butterflies. There is a sparse fence, a deep path and a few trees. The petals are falling from the branches and the young leaves have not yet grown, reflecting the fullness of spring. Fences and paths indicate that this is a rural area; "the flowers have fallen before they become shades" and "cauliflower" in the conclusion indicate that this is the late spring season. The last two sentences, "Children hurriedly chased yellow butterflies, flying into cauliflowers and nowhere to be found" depict the joyful scene of children catching butterflies. The conjoined use of the two verbs "hurry away" and "chase" vividly portrays the child's innocent, lively, curious and competitive demeanor and psychology. The three words "Nowhere to be found" leave room for imagination and aftertaste for the readers, as if there is another child in front of him who is scratching his head and feeling at a loss in front of a field of golden cauliflower.