Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - What does "clear glass and bright oranges" mean?

What does "clear glass and bright oranges" mean?

In the sun, the glass is pure and the oranges are golden.

"The coloured glaze is clear, and the orange is bright", this sentence comes from "Sacrifice" written by the unknown master poet Kosuke Kitajima. His original text is "a local hero, singing in an abandoned parking lot, with clear glass and brilliant oranges." The last two sentences can be said to be a stroke of genius, but they say that a beauty will die and a hero will grow old. All prosperity is like a reflection, but an illusion you see. The glass is really pure, but it is still glass. The orange is really golden, but it is just an orange after all. One is to satirize people who live in fantasy, perhaps expressing a little hope after disappointment.

Nowadays, many people use this sentence to describe the weather, saying that it is sunny and the sun is brilliant. Some people use it to describe love. "Your skirt can support all the gentle, transparent glass and brilliant oranges. Not limited by summer, but time is still abundant. " Perhaps the meaning expressed by the poet Kosuke Kitajima at first is not beautiful, so it depends on how we understand it.

The glass is clear, the oranges are bright, and a star stops to illuminate you and me.