Qinyuan Spring Changsha has collars up and down.

The inscription on the gate is: Look.

A word "look" dominates the content of uptown: look at the mountains and forests; The river is full of water, and hundreds of people compete for the flow. The eagle strikes the sky, the fish is shallow, and all kinds of frost fight for freedom.

The leader's description of the scenery below. The scenery is vivid: the mountain is red, the river is blue, the eagle hits the sky and the fish is shallow. On the other hand, it is: looking down, looking up, looking down, up and down, high and low, combining static and dynamic, writing a beautiful picture of the motherland being rewarded in the cold autumn and a struggle scene in which everything struggles for survival and freedom in the cold current.

The next inscription is: just.

A word "QIA" directs the following contents: QIA is a classmate and teenager, in full bloom; Scholar spirit, Fang Qiu. Pointing out the maze, inspiring words, the dirt in Wan Huhou that year.

The first sentence of the next movie begins with "I took a hundred couples swimming", which is the author's memory of the past revolutionary years.

Extended data:

Qinyuanchun Changsha is a poem by Mao Zedong, a modern poet. By describing autumn scenery in Changsha and recalling his revolutionary struggle life in his youth, this word expresses the revolutionary youth's feelings for the destiny of the country and their lofty desire to take the world as their responsibility, despise reactionary rulers and transform old China. The whole word is between phrases, blending sense with reason and scene.

References:

Baidu Encyclopedia-Changsha Qinyuanchun