After the thrush flew out of the cage in "Scarecrow", he felt that his previous life in the cage was not good.
"Scarecrow·Thrush" tells the story of a thrush who enjoys the glory and wealth in the home of a young master. He spends every day being pampered and pampered just to sing to the young master. It began to feel very happy. As time went by, it no longer understood the meaning and interest of what it was singing. Until one day, the thrush forgot to close the cage door, so he flew out to find the answer he wanted to find.
After seeing the unfortunate people, Huamei realized that he had been very pitiful before. After understanding all this, Huamei decided not to go back. It came to the free wilderness, and there were no longer cage bars surrounding it. It could do whatever it wanted. When it met unfortunate people or things, it would use its songs to drive away their sorrow. From then on, the thrush was free. Live happily.
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Appreciation of "Scarecrow":
Ye Shengtao incorporated the core of realism into his later works, reflecting a touch of melancholy and sad lyrical color. His fairy tales aim to inspire children to understand and care about what is happening around them, and to understand the sorrow of adults in real life. "Scarecrow" allows children to see the suffering fate of the workers and peasants in the 1920s, and its creative style has long become the dominant style of Chinese children's literature creation.
Ye Shengtao's fairy tales have poetic fairy tale artistic conception, easy-to-understand fairy tale language, and national style. From the fairy tale themes to the content of the call, he has extremely national characteristics. In terms of exploring the fairy tale themes, "Scarecrow" embodies a distinct national color.
The narrative mode is three paragraphs and partial repetition. In "Scarecrow", the misfortunes of the old woman, the fisherman's daughter, and the weak woman reflect the common bitterness and hardship of the people at the bottom of society.