At this time, a dark and thin gentleman with a moustache came in, wearing glasses and holding a large and small stack of books. As soon as I put the book on the podium, I introduced myself to the students in a slow and depressed tone: "My name is Fujino Genkuro ..."
It is said that Mr. Fujino is very careless in his clothes and sometimes forgets to wear a tie. Winter is an old coat, shivering. Once I got on the train, the conductor suspected that he was a pickpocket and asked the guests on the bus to be careful. What they said is probably true, so I once saw him not wearing a tie in class. ?
I handed in my copied speech, and he accepted it and returned it to me in a day or three, saying that he would give it to him once a week in the future. When I took it down and opened it, I was taken aback and felt uneasy and grateful. It turned out that my handout was changed from beginning to end with a red pen, which not only added many omissions, but also corrected Lian Wenfa's mistakes.
The name of the work "Mr. Fujino" The origin of the work "Morning Flowers and Evening Picking" was written by Lu Xun (formerly known as Zhou Shuren)?
Flowers in the morning and flowers in the evening are the only collection of commemorative essays written by Lu Xun, originally named "Coming Back to Life", which has always received rave reviews. The author said that these articles are "memoirs" copied from memory. This book is a collection of Lu Xun's 1926' s reminiscence essays, with ten articles in total. The first five articles were written in Beijing and the last five in Xiamen. This article was written in1926 10 12, originally published in19261February10, the 23rd issue of Mangyuan, with subtitle.
"Mr. Fujino" is a reminiscence prose, which is selected from Lu Xun's prose collection "Flowers in the Morning and Evening Picking Up". The article tells several episodes of Lu Xun's studying medicine from Tokyo to Sendai, including the life of "Qing students" in Tokyo, memories of traveling from Tokyo to Sendai, food and accommodation in Sendai, being rejected by students with narrow national concepts in Japan, and the excitement of watching a movie. The emphasis is on Mr. Fujino's valuable qualities, mixed with feelings of self-blame and gratitude to the teacher, which subtly highlights the author's spirit of studying hard for the motherland. It is a seemingly scattered life fragment, but it is organically unified in the author's patriotic thought.
Mr Fujino recorded several episodes of the author's life from Tokyo to Sendai to study medicine. This article is rich in content, vertical and horizontal in brushwork, scattered in form and condensed in spirit, and a distinct patriotic clue runs through the whole article, which makes every seemingly insignificant life fragment shine with dazzling brilliance, thus giving readers profound enlightenment.