From the prose poem "Walking into Nature": chasing birds, walking into dense forests, walking into streams, walking into deep mountains, walking into butterflies, walking into wild flowers, we walked into nature. Let the hammer break every rock, let the brush visit every petal, hold high the white insect-proof net and capture a beautiful spring. Turn yourself into a big tree and experience the depth of the earth; Turn yourself into white clouds and feel the distance of the blue sky. Only by integrating yourself into nature can you understand how wonderful life is. Go into nature and love nature. When you come back from nature, you will tell your friends quietly: what is purity, what is beauty, what is wisdom and what is emotion. ...
In "Let a small hammer wake up every rock, let a brush visit every petal, hold high a white insect net, and net a beautiful spring", the author uses rhetorical devices such as personification and parallelism to humanize "poetry", "hammer" and "brush" to make poetry easier to understand and learn.