A line between Greater sea and the sky. What does this poem mean?

It means:

The horizon is the dividing line between the sea and the blue sky. Ships sail on the sea and birds soar in the sky. The horizon also separates the boat from the bird. ...

If the horizon can be erased by rubber, then the sea and the sky are integrated, and the ship and the bird are together.

Haiyan came, and its flapping wings seemed to have an eraser wiping the thread from a distance.

The sea-sky line not only refers to the horizon, but also describes the vastness of the sky and the sea. The author hopes to erase this rhinoceros in exchange for the freedom of the species of heaven and earth.

Author: Li

Original text:

I don't know if it's the naughty boy, on the blue chess piece.

Draw a straight line and divide it into the sea and the blue sky.

The friendship between the bird and the ship was cut off from now on.

The boat is sailing in the sea and the birds are flying in the blue sky.

I really want to erase that line with an eraser.

Let the bird and the boat stay together forever and restore the long-awaited friendship.

At this moment, a petrel fluttered its wings and flew in.

Oh, isn't that an eraser? Two spaced straight lines are wiped back and forth.

Extended data:

Li (1936 ~) is under the pen name Fuji. People from Shenzhen, Guangdong. Graduated from Chinese Department of South China Normal University. Member of Chinese Writers Association.

1936 10 was born in Shenzhen, Guangdong. After graduating from college, I worked as a middle school teacher, teaching director, secretary of Guangzhou Municipal Party Committee and editor-in-chief of Guangzhou Middle School Student Newspaper. Later, I served as editor and editor-in-chief of Guangzhou Daily. Among them, he was the director of the editorial department of prose poetry and the director of the corporate culture department of China Golden Newspaper.

Member of the World Chinese Writers Association, member of the World Chinese Poets Association, member of the Chinese Writers Association and director of the Guangzhou Writers Association. Entering the literary world in 1950s, 1953 (middle school) co-published the first book of poetry.

He has published poems, essays, novels and other works in more than 0/00 national newspapers such as People's Literature, People's Daily, Children's Literature and China Youth Daily. His works have been published in various "anthologies" all over the country, and he has published three solo albums 13, co-edited and co-authored nearly ten books with others, and won national, provincial and municipal excellent works awards.

His major life stories have been included in Biography of Guangdong Contemporary Writers, Biography of China Writers and Artists, Who's Who in China Contemporary Art World, China Dictionary of Senior Professional Cadres' Achievements, Who's Who in the World, and Ci Hai of World Cultural Celebrities, etc. His name has also been recorded in the history of contemporary children's literature in China.

References:

Li Fuqi-Baidu Encyclopedia