-
Overview of Chapter 7 of Childhood.
Chapter 7 can be divided into two parts: the first and the second.
The first part focuses on two different gods for my grandmother and grandfather. Grandma's God is merciful and blesses mankind, dominates everything, and sees all things, while Grandpa's God is tyrannical and domineering, boundless in power, harsh and cruel, and feared by everyone. This contrast is shown through vivid literary descriptions, without the slightest conceptual preaching, and is brilliantly and intriguingly written.
The second part mainly writes about the painful feelings after what I saw and heard on the street, and by the way, I also revisit the distress of staying at home. It is in this family and social environment that "I" lived and grew up.
The first part is about the spiritual pillars and ideological environment of "me", and the second part is about the daily life and social environment of "me" at home and abroad. Both aspects have clearly influenced my worldview and outlook on life.
Objective factors of formation. This is obviously the main reason why the first and second chapters are combined into one chapter.
-
The main contents of the eighth chapter of the year of "Childhood" are:It tells the story of "my" grandfather who sold his old house and bought a new one, so he had some interesting neighbors. Their neighbors include colonels, orderlies, milkmen, and a tenant known as "the good thing."
The stories tell about their lives and lives respectively, and they both often help "my" family. The article also tells about "my" grandmother inviting her neighbors to her party.
The relationship between the second and second chapters of Chapter 8 of the year of childhood:
The first part depicts the grandmother's fairy tale telling and her ability to record the beautiful and charming fairy tale of the hermit and the warrior, and the second part introduces the first intellectual friend and focuses on their friendship.
The content between the first and second chapters of the eighth chapter is connected by the scene of "good things" listening to grandma tell fairy tales, ** deliberately using a bright and dark technique to skillfully let the reader understand a certain awkward relationship between "good things" and his grandmother, "good things" is his mantra.
The literal translation is: "good thing".
-
The main content of the eighth chapter of childhood is: my grandmother can tell fairy tales, and once I told the beautiful and charming fairy tale "The Hermit and the Warrior"; My first intellectual friend, an "outsider" and a "weirdo" who didn't know his real name and surname, only known by the nickname "good things", had a deep friendship between them, the "weirdos" listened to their grandmother's fairy tales, and the "good things" had some kind of awkward relationship with her grandmother.
-
Chapter 7 of Childhood is summarized as follows:
Chapter 7 of Childhood focuses on Alyosha's grandmother and grandfather's belief in God and his daily life. Chapter 7 can be divided into two parts: the first and the second. In the first part, I wrote that my grandmother's God was merciful, but my grandfather's God was domineering; The second part focuses on what Alyosha saw and heard on the street and how he felt.
Childhood is the first in a trilogy of autobiographical works by Soviet writer Maxim Gorky based on his own experiences (the other two are "In the World" and "My University").
The work tells the childhood life of Alyosha (Gorky's milk name) from the age of three to ten, vividly reproduces the living conditions of the lower class people in Tsarist Russia in the seventies and eighties of the 19th century, and writes Gorky's understanding of suffering and his unique views on social life.
When Alyosha was three years old, he lost his father, and his mother, Varvara, placed him in the home of his maternal grandfather, Kashrin. My grandfather's family lived in Nizhny-Novgorod. When my grandfather was young, he was a slender man, and later opened a dyeing workshop and became a small owner.
When Alyosha came to her grandfather's house, her grandfather's business had already begun to decline, and due to the recession of the family's business, his grandfather became more and more domineering.
Alyosha's two uncles, Mikhail and Yakov, constantly quarreled and fought over the division of the family and the embezzlement of Alyosha's mother's dowry. In this family, Alyosha saw a fog of hatred between people, and even children were poisoned by this atmosphere. As soon as Alyosha entered his grandfather's house, he did not like his grandfather, was afraid of him, and felt that there was hostility in his eyes.
One day, out of curiosity and at the instigation of his cousin, he threw a white tablecloth into the dye vat and dyed it blue, only to be beaten unconscious by his grandfather and suffer a serious illness. From then on, Alyosha began to observe the people around her with uneasiness, feeling unbearable for the humiliation and pain of herself and others.
Unable to bear this life, his mother left him and left the family. But in this filthy environment, there is also another kind of people, another kind of life. There is an optimistic, unpretentious little Tskgang, an upright old worker, Grigory.
On festive evenings, Yakov plays the guitar and plays heart-pounding tunes.
My grandmother danced a folk dance, as if she had regained her youth. All this made Alyosha feel both joy and sorrow. Among these people, the grandmother had the deepest influence on Alyosha.
My grandmother was kind and fair, loved life, and believed that good would always triumph over evil. She knew many beautiful folk tales about mercy for the poor and weak, and praise of justice and light.
-
The main content of the thirteenth chapter of "Childhood": My grandfather and my grandmother lived separately, and my grandmother and Alyosha lived a very difficult and difficult life, and gained the friendship of their friends, and finally ended with the tragic scene of the death of my mother.
"Childhood" is the first part of the autobiographical ** trilogy created by Soviet writer Maxim Gorky based on his own experience, writing Gorky's understanding of suffering, his unique views on social life, and a constant desire and strength surging between the lines.
Very kind to my grandmother.
The central character of the first chapter is the maternal grandmother. She is kind, intelligent, capable, and loving, and is an excellent representative of thousands of Russian women who have had a great influence on "me" in my life. At the end of the chapter, the portrait and character of my grandmother are described in poetic and beautiful language, creating a radiant and ordinary and great figure.
In this work of childhood, the better words related to this work are, naïve, naughty, clever, happy, fun, crying, angry, happy, happy, abnormal, stingy, tenacious, decisive, etc. >>>More
When Alyosha came to his grandfather's house, his grandfather's business had already begun to decline, and Alyosha's two uncles were constantly quarreling and fighting over the division of the family and embezzling Alyosha's mother's dowry, and due to the recession of the family business, his grandfather became more and more tyrannical. One day, out of curiosity, Alyosha threw a white tablecloth into a dye vat and dyed it blue, only to be beaten unconscious by her grandfather. Alyosha's mother, who couldn't bear this life, left him and left the family (I don't know if it meets your requirements).
You're from Goldbridge Middle School, right?