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Tell me why you like the poem National Memorial

Yu Youren's dying poem "National Memorial": Bury me on a high mountain, and hope that I will be great; I will not see my greatness, and I will only cry bitterly. Bury me on a high mountain, and look at my hometown; I will not see my hometown, and I will never be able to see it again. forget. The sky is blue, the sea is vast, and on the mountains, there is national mourning. Yu Youren's famous patriotic poem "Wang Da" (also known as "National Sorrow") was published after his death in Taipei on November 10, 1999. Mr. Yu Youren, who lived in Taiwan in his later years, was very eager to return to his roots, but he was unable to do so. On January 1, 2011, he wrote in his diary: "After a hundred years, I would like to be buried in a high place with many trees in Yushan or Lishan. The mountain should be high and the trees should be big, so that you can always see the big picture. My hometown is China big". Soon after, Mr. Yu Youren wrote the sincere and melancholy poem "Wang Da" on January 1, 2011. This is an elegy he wrote for his hometown, in which his nostalgia for his country is beyond words. It is a swan song that touches the deep pain in the souls of the descendants of Yan and Huang. In 1991, Yu Youren was taken to Taiwan, but his wife and son stayed in Taiwan, and they were separated from each other from then on. Therefore, his "Wang Da" is not a general feeling of family and country, but contains the unforgettable pain of life experience. The reunification of the motherland is what the poet has pursued throughout his life. Reading this poem gives people a feeling of deep sadness and patriotism. Due to well-known reasons, Mr. Yu has lived in Taiwan for a long time and cannot return to his hometown. However, the constant waves across the Taiwan Strait cannot stop him from looking forward to his future, his hometown, and his family. The first two stanzas of the poem adopt the technique of repeating chapters and chanting repeatedly to express the deep yearning and nostalgia for the country and hometown. It is a strong expression of the poet's true feelings. Bai Ju, the great poet of the Tang Dynasty: "Those who touch people's hearts, Nothing comes first than love." It is this sincere and strong emotion and unforgettable longing that gives readers a strong shock and arouses their emotional and ideological excitement. The first two sentences of the last stanza of the poem are borrowed from the Northern Dynasties folk song "Chi Le Song". They use overlapping words to make the objects vivid and vivid! The last two sentences, "On the mountain, there is national mourning!" are puns and have rich meanings. "National Sorrow" comes from Qu Yuan's "Nine Songs" of Chu Ci. "Nine Songs" is a set of poems composed by Qu Yuan in imitation of the sacrificial songs of the southern state of Chu during his exile. "National Memorial" is one of them. It is an elegy in memory of the soldiers. The so-called "sorrow", "Xiaoerya" says: "Nothing." "The ghost of the Lord is mourning." The poet cleverly used "national mourning" to express his regret that he could not be buried in the country after his death and that his soul could not return to his hometown. The ancients said: "When a bird flies back to its hometown, a fox will always be on the ground when it dies." Beasts are like this, how can humans be embarrassed? Man-made obstructions cause relatives to gather together and their flesh and blood to be separated. After death, the soul cannot return to its hometown and has no peace. How can you read it without making people cry with sadness? With the help of these two poems, the poet expresses the hearts of many people who have the same experience as the poet: what they dream about and cannot forget in their hearts is the reunification of the motherland! My husband could not see the reunification of the motherland during his lifetime. After his death, he had to be buried on a high hill and look into the distance. He really couldn't rest in peace!