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The poem "What I See in the Night Book" was written by the Southern Song Dynasty poet Ye Shaoweng. Xiao Xiao's autumn wind blows the sycamore leaves, sending a chill, and the poet who travels abroad can't help but miss his hometown. One or two sentences write the scene, using the falling leaves, the autumn wind, and the cold air to set off the desolation of the wanderer's wandering, loneliness and loneliness.
Three or four sentences write about children catching crickets at night, with high interest, cleverly contrasting with pathos, and showing the loneliness and helplessness of living in a foreign country. This poem writes about the homesickness of the detainees, but the author does not write about how to live alone in a lonely house and miss his hometown, but focuses on the small scene at night.
Notes] Xiao Xiao: The sound of the wind.
Guest: Traveler's homesickness.
Pick: I pluck it with a slim thing.
Promote weaving: commonly known as crickets, and in some areas it is also called crickets.
Fence: Fence.
Xiao Xiao's autumn wind blows the sycamores, sending a chill, and the wanderer who is traveling abroad can't help but miss his hometown. Suddenly, I saw the lights under the fence in the distance, and I thought it was the children catching crickets.
Appreciation] The author expresses a feeling of homesickness and nostalgia for his hometown.
In the poem. The first and second sentences write about the flying sycamore leaves, the cold sound, the autumn wind, and the drifting of the river boat, which effectively sets off the poet's bleak state of mind of living in a foreign land and wandering. The third and fourth sentences describe the life scenes of children taking up the lantern to travel at night and playing tricks on crickets, which is naturally easy to arouse the poet's association.
He will remember that his childhood was also innocent, romantic, happy and funny; He will think of the warmth and beauty of his homeland; He will think of the voices and smiles of his relatives and friends, and a sense of intimacy like returning to his hometown and childhood will arise spontaneously.
The poem expresses the author's loneliness and loneliness of living in a foreign land and returning to no fixed place.
One or two sentences write the scene, using the falling leaves, the autumn wind, and the cold air to set off the desolation of the wanderer's wandering, loneliness and loneliness. A river of autumn water, the sky is full of darkness, and the sound of cold is touching the ears, and the poet's sleeplessness all night must be due to depression in his heart and unsatisfactory intentions. Three or four sentences write about children catching crickets at night, with high interest, cleverly contrasting with pathos, and showing the loneliness and helplessness of living in a foreign country.
The poem expresses the author's thoughts and feelings of nostalgia for his childhood life.
Looking at the whole poem, as a whole, the third and fourth sentences write what the poet saw in the passenger boat. Children catch crickets at night, they are full of interest, forget the autumn wind, the chill, ignore the falling trees, the cold of the autumn river, and catch the crickets with relish in the middle of the night. The concentration and obsession, the caution, and the ups and downs of sensitivity are all revealed in the gestures of every gesture.
This kind of cheerful and interesting life scene is naturally easy to evoke the poet's nostalgia and nostalgia for his childhood life. One or two sentences can also be understood in this way, the autumn scene of Xiao Xiao's cold voice and the falling sycamore leaves reveals a sense of wandering and melancholy, which also reflects the poet's nostalgia and longing for the carefree life of his childhood when he lives in a foreign country.
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"What I See in the Night Book" is about children catching crickets at night.
"What I See in the Night Book" is a seven-character ancient poem written by the Southern Song Dynasty poet Ye Shaoweng.
Full text: Xiao Xiao Wuye sends a cold sound, and the autumn wind on the river moves guests. Knowing that there are children who pick and promote weaving, a light falls on the fence in the middle of the night.
Translation: Xiao Xiao's autumn wind blows the sycamores, sending a chill, and the wanderer who is traveling abroad can't help but miss his hometown. Suddenly, I saw the lights under the fence in the distance, and I thought it was the children catching crickets.
Literary Appreciation:
This poem was written by the poet who lived in a foreign land and felt autumn in the quiet night, expressing the sorrow of the detention and the deep feeling of homesickness. The grass and trees are withering, the flowers are decaying, the autumn wind on the river is cold, and the sycamore leaves are cold. The word "send" in the poem makes people feel as if they hear the sound of cold air.
The poem uses overlapping onomatopoeia at the beginning of the sentence, which evokes the reader's auditory image at the beginning, creating the image of autumn air and the silence of the autumn night. Then use the word "send" to show movement in the quiet, leading to the "cold sound". In the sound of the sycamore leaves shaking down, it seems to contain the cold air of the skull; The synaesthesia of hearing and touch renders the bleakness and coldness of the environment.
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Xiao Xiao's autumn wind blows the sycamores, sending a chill, and the poet who travels abroad can't help but miss his hometown. Suddenly, he saw a light under the fence in the distance, and thought it was a child catching crickets. This image made him feel very intimate, and perhaps it reminded him of his hometown and childhood.
Seen in the night book. Ye Shaoweng.
Xiao Xiao Wuye sent the cold sound, and the autumn wind on the river moved the guests.
Knowing that there are children who pick and promote weaving, a light falls on the fence in the middle of the night.
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"What I See in the Night Book" was written by the Nanning poet Ye Shaoweng, and what I saw in the night book can be felt by the side of Ye Shaoweng's feelings of missing his hometown.
The word "book" in the title means to write, to record. In this poem, the author expresses his feelings of homesickness by describing the sycamores, lamps, children, and fences he saw, the autumn wind, the sound of weaving, the sound of the wind blowing the leaves of the sycamores, and the coldness, depression, loneliness, and interest he felt.
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In "What I See in the Night Book", the author describes seeing children catching crickets, hearing the autumn wind, and feeling the coldness of autumn.
"What I See in the Night Book" is a seven-character ancient poem written by the Southern Song Dynasty poet Ye Shaoweng.
Full text: Xiao Xiao Wuye sends a cold sound, and the autumn wind on the river moves guests. Knowing that there are children who pick and promote weaving, a light falls on the fence in the middle of the night.
Xiao Xiao's autumn wind blows the sycamores, sending a chill, and the wanderer who is traveling abroad can't help but miss his hometown. Suddenly, I saw the lights under the fence in the distance, and I thought it was the children catching crickets.
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"What I See in the Night Book" was written by the Nanning poet Ye Shaoweng. The word "book" in the title means to write, to record. In this poem, the author expresses his feelings of homesickness by describing the sycamores, lamps, children, and fences he sees, the autumn wind, the sound of weaving, the sound of the wind blowing the leaves of the sycamores, and the coldness, depression, loneliness, and interest he feels.
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It expresses the author's homesickness.
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I heard the autumn wind, saw the children catching crickets, and felt the cold of autumn.
From: Southern Song Dynasty poet Ye Shaoweng "What I See in the Night Book".
Original text: Xiao Xiao Wuye sends a cold sound, and the autumn wind on the river moves guests.
Knowing that there are children who pick and promote weaving, a light falls on the fence in the middle of the night.
Translation: The autumn wind blows the leaves of the sycamore trees, sending a chill, and the autumn wind blowing on the river can't help but miss his hometown. Suddenly, I saw a little light under the fence in the distance, and I thought it was the children catching crickets.
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"What I See in the Night Book" was written by the Nanning poet Ye Baishaoweng. The word "book" in the title means to write, to record the degree. In this poem, the author expresses his feelings of missing Rong's hometown by asking and describing the sycamores, lamps, children, and fences he sees, the autumn wind, the sound of weaving, and the wind blowing the leaves of the sycamores in the sycamores, and the coldness, depression, loneliness, and interest he feels.
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