First, draw plum trees and small houses. Draw apricot, wheat and cauliflower. Draw butterflies and dragonflies. Write the poem "Four Seasons of Pastoral Fun (Part 25)" under the picture.
Colour plums yellow, apricots red and trees and lawns green. Colour the small house blue, the wheat green and the cauliflower green. Dragonflies are painted red and butterflies are painted orange.
Appreciation: In the first two sentences, the author uses the changes of four things to show that summer is coming, plums turn yellow, apricots mature, wheat flowers turn white and cauliflower falls out. And the words and sentences are used neatly. In the last two sentences, the poet compares "no one has passed" with "dragonflies and butterflies fly" to set off the tranquility of life.
At the same time, "no one has ever lived" implies that people are still working outside because the days are getting longer, writing about the busy life in the countryside. Through the last two sentences, we can also see the poet's complex mood, including his satisfaction with the quiet life. At the same time, because he was an official before, he was busy with his business, and now he retired to the village, nobody cares, and maybe he was lost.
Early summer has come, the plums on the branches have turned golden, and the apricots have grown into fruitful ones. Snow-white wheat flowers are swaying in the wind, and rape flowers are sparse and about to fall. Now the days are long, and no one passes by outside the fence, only dragonflies and butterflies are flying here.