Author: Yang Wanli
Children take off the ice from the golden basin, and colorful silks are worn as silver clangs.
The sound of the jade chime ringing through the forest, and the sound of the Edwardian glass shattering on the ground.
Children get up in the morning and pluck out ice from the frozen copper basin.
Clang is an ancient musical instrument like a gong.
Glass is a kind of natural jade in ancient times, also called water jade, not the present glass.
It is written that a child puts ice cubes together with colorful threads and uses them as silver clangs, knocking them with a ping-pong sound, and then the ice cubes slip off when he is not careful. The scene after the ice cube breaks is
left blank, giving the impression of running in front of a stop sign.
People can't help but wonder what happens to the urchin with the colorful thread in his hand: clapping his hands and
leaping? Jaw-dropping? Raise their arms in joy? And what would be the result of that? The whole poem highlights
the word "childish". The child is such a wise man that his childishness and fun
can make him forget the cold of winter, find games that make him tireless and y
involved, and keep him as energetic and happy as ever.
The poet's heartfelt respect for the child's innocence is the only way to portray the child's interest in playing with ice in such a sincere and heartfelt manner.
The whole poem takes the instant
interval scene, avoiding direct description, with vivid image "through the forest" sound
sound and apt metaphor, with the old man's eyes to explore the child's interest.