Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - Why did Shi Tiesheng compare his mother to a chrysanthemum?

Why did Shi Tiesheng compare his mother to a chrysanthemum?

1, leaves are falling outside the window.

Function: Compare static with dynamic, and highlight the loneliness, pain and hopelessness of "me".

2. Yellow flowers are elegant, white flowers are noble, purple flowers are warm and deep, and autumn wind is blooming brilliantly.

Function: The exuberant vitality of chrysanthemum is written, the tragic and deep atmosphere is rendered, and the psychological change of "I" from pain and hopelessness to clarity and firmness is highlighted.

The article is moving, but people are more impressed by the writer's talent and atmosphere, and may lack the soul to tell the truth. There is no need to pretend to show your true feelings. Motherly love is like this. You don't need to be vigorous or fancy, you can write a great movement bit by bit.

Extended data:

Creation background

This article was written in 198 1 and first published in Nanfang Daily that year, when Shi Tiesheng was 30 years old. When Shi Tiesheng was 2 1 years old, that is, 1969 years old, he went to Yan 'an, northern Shaanxi to "jump the queue". Three years later, he returned to Beijing because his legs were paralyzed, worked in Beijing Xinqiao Street Factory, and then went home to recuperate due to illness.

In his vibrant and colorful youth, he encountered the misfortune of life, so his temper became gloomy and furious. At this time, his mother's liver disease is quite serious, and she often can't sleep all night in pain, but she holds her son tightly and encourages him to live a good life. Shi Tiesheng wrote this article in memory of his mother after her sudden departure.

It shows Shi Tiesheng's deep nostalgia for his mother, his endless love for his mother, his praise for maternal love, his regret for "keeping his son but not staying with his relatives" and his incomprehension of his mother the year before last, which is very touching. The full text is unremarkable, without careful weaving and carving, but every sentence is full of emotion and every word is like gold.