Grassland is an essay written by Lao She, a famous writer, when he first came to the grassland and visited Chenbaerhuqi. The author described what he saw, heard and felt when he first entered the grassland in delicate and fresh language, praised the beautiful scenery of the grassland and sang the national friendship of Mongolian and Chinese compatriots with deep affection.
The text is divided into three parts. The first part is 1 natural section, which depicts the grassland scenery composed of sky, grass, hills, sheep, horses and cattle. The second part, the second and third natural paragraphs, depicts the scenes where the flag owners of Chenbaerhu Banner "men, women and children", "galloping horses" and "flapping their wings and dancing" greet tourists from afar, vividly reappearing the scene of grassland changing from static to lively.
The third part is the fourth and fifth paragraphs, which describe the warm reception of the host, the gathering of the host and the guest, and the farewell after the author arrives at the destination. Finally, the full text ends with a concise, powerful and meaningful poem. The article is in the order of whereabouts, from scenery to scenery, from scenery to people.
The written language is beautiful, the scenery is poetic and picturesque, and the narrative part is eloquent and vivid. There are two outstanding characteristics in expression. One is to combine scenery with feelings. From "the air is so fresh and the sky is so clear" to "I always want to sing a song to express my joy", from "thousands of miles away" to "the green color is flowing" and then to "it's amazing.
It also makes people feel comfortable and want to "look around for a long time" and "sit down and whisper a wonderful poem". Love is born of scenery, which is beautiful and the scenes blend together. The second is to make the scene tangible through rich imagination. For example, comparing the green hills to Chinese paintings rendered only in green, comparing the grasslands to "endless green carpets" and comparing sheep to "big white flowers", Steed Daniel also "seems to recall the infinite fun of grasslands".
Rich imagination makes the description of the scenery more vivid and vivid, full of picture sense, and the lines are filled with rich grassland customs.