Huade school
The School of Flowers is a prose poem written by Indian poet Rabindranath Tagore. This poem describes the wonderful scene of countless flowers suddenly appearing on the green grass after the rumbling thunderstorm in June. The poet imitates the innocent tone of children with magical and romantic brushstrokes.
Draw a poetic world of children and nature in a cheerful style, and express the harmonious relationship between man and nature in the poet's eyes. The whole story is interspersed with scenes, and the language expression is fresh, showing a beautiful, lovely, rich and delicate childlike world.
Hua Pai's English poetry collection "Crescent Moon Collection" published in 19 13. From 1902 to 19 13, Tagore's personal life suffered a series of tragedies. His father, wife, son and daughter died one after another. The sadness of the poet's soul is sublimated into beautiful feelings in the New Moon Collection. He described a pure and beautiful world for children.
Knowledge expansion:
This poem imagines fantasy, from reality to nothingness, sublimation at different levels, deepening step by step, vast space and complete combination. Children's voices are expressed in the form of fairy tales, and the form and content are highly harmonious.
Imagination in the poem is interesting because it tends to be natural, and completely integrates natural scenes with children's school life and psychological activities, fully showing the world and imagination in children's hearts.
Rabindranath Tagore is an Indian writer, poet and social activist. Born into a landlord family. Studying in England. 192 1 year, an international university was established in Sandnikdan. Writing in Bengali is rich in creation all his life. His early works include poetry collection Twilight, Morning Song and plays Monk and King and Queen.
Since 1903, he has published novels such as Little Sand, Shipwreck, Gora, plays such as Mojito Tara, Post Office, Oleander, poems such as Jitang Kerry, Crescent Moon, Gardener and Birds, and many short stories.
He expressed sympathy for the miserable life of the lower classes and the miserable situation of women under British imperialism, condemned feudalism and caste system, described the tyranny of imperialism and bureaucracy, and also reflected the conflict between bourgeois democratic thought and orthodox Hinduism. Poetry has a fresh style, a national style, but it is mysterious and sentimental.