Wen Yiduo's Perhaps and Ye Si's Ode to Bitter Melon
The explanation of Ode to Bitter Melon has been answered. You can go and see:. Qid = 7007040903 142 -。 A/tpy/tpy-syl/public _/chinlang1.8a. Content analysis: central image: sleep instead of death. 1. Section 1: Don't tell the truth about your daughter's death. Imagine that your daughter is just too tired to cry and needs to sleep. This shows the author's love for her daughter, who refused to admit her death because of her deep love. Since the daughter is "asleep", it is natural for her father to protect her and call her "nighthawk, frog, bat" and other offensive words, so as not to disturb her sleep. This shows father's kindness. 2. Section 2: Continue the previous paragraph to protect the daughter's sleep. No amount of sunshine and breeze can wake her up. Section III: Through the comparison between the underground world and the above-ground world, it shows the author's hatred and criticism of the real world. Because the daughter's death is also caused by the ugly real society. The author thinks that it is better and more beautiful for her daughter to lie in the ground and listen to the sound of earthworms turning over mud and the sound of small grass roots absorbing water than to listen to the curses of the world. Section 4: Finally, I told my daughter to sleep peacefully, told her to close her eyes, covered her with loess and burned paper money for her (reminiscent of the warmth and kindness her father covered her daughter). B. comprehensive analysis: 1. The meaning of the word "maybe" and the author's feelings it shows: 1. Meaning: the meaning of uncertainty, assuming that the imagination of death is sleep. 2. The author's feelings: a) Self-consolation, refusing to accept the facts, very sad. B) Sublimate grief into love and care for her daughter. 2. The expression of the theme of "death" in the poem "Maybe": 1. The first section implies that the daughter sleeps in the wilderness, and "nighthawk, frog and bat" are all wild animals. 2. The second section points out that the daughter "sleeps" under a pine tree that the sunshine and breeze can't reach. The essence is buried under a pine tree, and the author doesn't know it yet. Section 3 further points out that the daughter is "sleeping" in the soil. She can hear the sound of "earthworms turning over mud and grass to absorb water". 4. In the fourth quarter, it is obvious that the daughter's sleep is actually death. "Cover the loess gently" and "Call paper money to fly slowly" are all directly related to death. Expression: first obscure, then gradually clear. 3. The father's love for his daughter in the poem is shown in. 1. Protect her from animals and sunlight. Imagine your daughter sleeping underground, which is more comfortable than living on the ground. Cover her with loess and burn her paper money.