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The Red Army is not afraid of the difficulties of the expedition, but what rhetorical techniques are used casually across thousands of rivers and mountains?

Rhetoric techniques of parallelism and exaggeration.

Qilu·Long March

Author Mao Zedong Modern dynasty?

The Red Army is not afraid of the difficulty of the expedition, and it can only wait for thousands of rivers and mountains.

The five ridges are meandering and the waves are flowing, and the fog is majestic and muddy.

The golden sands and water beat against the clouds and cliffs are warm, while the iron cables across the Dadu Bridge are cold.

I am even happier that there is thousands of miles of snow in Minshan Mountain, and the three armies are all happy after the passing.

Translation:

The Red Army was not afraid of all the hardships and hardships on the Long March, and regarded thousands of mountains and rivers as extremely ordinary. In the eyes of the Red Army, the endless Five Ridges were just undulating waves, and the majestic Wumeng Mountain was nothing more than a mud ball in the eyes of the Red Army.

The turbid waves of the Jinsha River hit the sky-high cliffs with steam. The dangerous bridge on the Dadu River is horizontal, and the iron cables hanging in the sky are shaking, and there are waves of chill. What was even more joyful was setting foot on the snow-covered Min Mountain. After the Red Army climbed over it, everyone was smiling.

Extended information:

Creative background:

In October 1934, the Chinese Workers’ and Peasants’ Red Army wanted to crush the Nationalist Government’s encirclement and suppression campaign, preserve their own strength, and also march northward. To resist Japan and save the nation from peril, starting from Ruijin, Jiangxi, the world-famous Long March began.

This seven-rhythm poem was composed after the Red Army soldiers crossed Minshan Mountain and shortly before the Long March was about to end in victory. As the leader of the Red Army, Mao Zedong had withstood countless tests. Now, with the dawn in front and victory in sight, he wrote this magnificent poem with great enthusiasm and pride. "Qilu·Long March" was written in late September 1935 and finalized in October.