Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Appreciate peach trees, apricot trees and pear trees. If you don't let me, I won't let you all be full of flowers, as red as fire powder and as white as Xia Xue.

Appreciate peach trees, apricot trees and pear trees. If you don't let me, I won't let you all be full of flowers, as red as fire powder and as white as Xia Xue.

The combination of rhetoric such as "parallelism", "serial" and "personification" vividly describes the competing opening of peach blossom, apricot blossom and pear blossom.

"Red as fire, pink as chardonnay, white as snow", three figures of speech are used together. These three figurative sentences constitute a parallelism sentence. From the perspective of color, the author describes peach blossom, apricot blossom and pear blossom in a colorful and vivid way. It is true that flowers compete with each other. These flowers are full of the fragrance of life, and also make the color of the whole spring scene richer and more moist.

Source:

This sentence comes from the modern essayist Zhu Ziqing's work Spring.

The first edition was published in July, 1933, and it has been selected by China middle school Chinese textbooks for a long time. In fact, this poem Ode to Spring is full of the writer's thoughts and feelings in a specific period. His pursuit of life and personality shows the traditional cultural accumulation in the writer's bones and his yearning for the realm of freedom.

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.