Great gods, imitate Zhu Ziqing's spring, paragraph 4.

The content is as follows: the stars in the sky show us the way like bright lights in the dark, and they also wink mischievously. Looking forward to, looking forward to, with flocks of geese flying south, the footsteps of autumn are approaching.

Everything is sunny. Fruits are ripe, autumn insects are singing and the weather is cold. Indus blooms for the butterfly of dreams. Chinese parasol tree, Chinese parasol tree, ginkgo tree, willow tree, you won't let me, I won't let you, leaves fall from the tree. Pieces of golden leaves are playing in the air with the wind. If they are tired, they will lie on the ground and rest. Soon the road was covered with golden leaves.

Spring is Zhu Ziqing's famous prose. The first edition was published in July, 1933, and it has been selected by China middle school Chinese textbooks for a long time. [1] In this poem Ode to Spring, it is actually full of the writer's thoughts and feelings, life pursuit and even personality pursuit in a specific period, which shows the traditional cultural accumulation in the writer's bones and his yearning for a free realm. After 1927, Zhu Ziqing has been searching for and creating an ideal world in the depths of his soul-the world of dreams, which is used to place his "rather restless" boxing heart, resist external interference, make himself "independent" in claustrophobic study, and achieve his academic achievements. Spring describes and eulogizes a lush spring, but it is a vivid portrayal of Zhu Ziqing's inner world.