laitimes

Chairman Mao's poem: Three Stages, Three Goals

As an atypical science and engineering man, he usually likes to read some literary and historical books, celebrity biographies, etc., and the most favorite of the poems is Chairman Mao's poems. Chairman Mao's poems are magnificent and generous. It covers a wide range of aspects, covering nature, society and life. His poems are deeply rooted in the practice of modern chinese society and in the earth-shaking revolutionary struggle at that time, and reading Chairman Mao's poems is to read a magnificent epic of the Chinese proletarian revolution and a manifestation of the image of the formation and development of Mao Zedong Thought.

Chairman Mao's poem: Three Stages, Three Goals

Chairman Mao's poems are roughly based on the axis of time and can be divided into three periods: the age of youth, the war years, and the period of socialist construction.

First, "young Zhengrong" and "Kunpeng hitting the waves" - ask the vast earth, who is the lord of the ups and downs!

The young Mao Zedong grew up in the midst of warlord wars and the heavy national calamities of the Japanese imperialists' ever-increasing aggression against China.

"The world rises and falls, and the pirate is responsible."

From the time he understood things, he set his mind to save the country. He is concerned about the future destiny of the motherland and the nation. This "zhi" is also what he calls anti-imperialism and anti-feudalism. At that time, the most important thing was to oppose the class roots that caused deep disasters to China and the Japanese imperialism that oppressed it the most.

Chairman Mao's poem: Three Stages, Three Goals

Mao Zedong was a poet who showed great poetic talent as a teenager. When Chairman Mao was young, he had a strong sense of home and country, and he was concerned about the future and destiny of the country and the nation. This was tempered and later created the great man Mao Zedong of the People's Republic of China. Most of the poems written by Mao Zedong in his youth are verbal and related to his ambition to resist Japanese aggression and save the country and the people.

When Mao Zedong was 17 years old, he gave poetry to his father:

Bao Er is determined to go out of the country,

Learning not to be famous vows not to return.

Bury the bones of the mulberry land,

Life is full of green hills.

It is said that this poem is imitated by Saigo Takamori. It is clear that it expresses the aspirations of the young Mao Zedong. At this time, the young Mao Zedong's ambition had already revealed the heart of saving the country that "the country rises and falls, and the pirate has the responsibility", at this time he left his hometown for the first time to study in Changsha.

Chairman Mao's poem: Three Stages, Three Goals

In the years when Mao Zedong was studying, the domestic situation was chaotic, first Yuan Shikai acted perversely and attempted to restore, and then the warlords in the north and south were in a scuffle, and the mountains and rivers were broken. Chairman Mao transformed the feelings of home and country into revolutionary exploration and practice of saving the country and the people. In 1925, Chairman Mao passed through Changsha and wrote the famous "Qinyuan Spring * Changsha", writing about the passionate ambition of revisiting the old land and touching the present and the ancient.

Independent cold autumn, xiangjiang north, orange island head.

See the red mountains all over the place, and the layers of forests are dyed;

The river is full of blue, and hundreds of boats are competing for the current.

Eagle strikes long skies, fish soar shallow bottom,

All kinds of frost days compete for freedom.

Ask the vast earth, who is the Lord of the ups and downs?

Bring a hundred couples to travel.

Reminiscing about the past, the years are thick.

Qia classmate is a teenager, and the style is flourishing;

Bookish and arrogant.

Pointing out the country, stirring up words,

Manure soil was ten thousand households in that year.

Have you ever remembered that the middle current hits the water, and the waves stop the flying boat?

This poem vividly summarizes the heroic fighting pride and heroism of the young Mao Zedong and his comrades-in-arms. "Who's in charge?" It shows the heroic and fearless revolutionary spirit of Mao Zedong and his comrades-in-arms in order to transform old China and the heroic ambition of "sacrificing myself for others"!

Chairman Mao's poem: Three Stages, Three Goals

Second, the yellow flowers of the battlefield are particularly fragrant - poetry on horseback

From the beginning of the first civil revolutionary war to the founding of New China, Chairman Mao's poems were, as he himself said, "on horseback", which reflected not what ordinary life saw and thought, but the revolutionary fighting life that turned the world upside down and carried forward the past. It does not express the ordinary mind, but the soul of the giants of the times that encompass history and embraces ancient and modern times, adheres to the integration of Marxism-Leninism with the concrete reality of the Chinese revolution, and is the concrete practice of constantly exploring the new road of the Chinese revolution. These include "The Jiang Gui War", which reflects the warlord melee, "Fisherman's Pride", which reflects the two anti-encirclement and suppression campaigns, and the Long March group poems "Loushan Pass", "Long March", and "Liupanshan" on the way to the Long March.

The storm suddenly changed, and the warlords resumed war.

Sprinkled on the world are all resentment, a pillow of yellow beams reappeared.

The red flag jumped over the Ting River and went straight down to Longyan Shanghang.

Packing up a piece of Jin Ou, dividing the fields and dividing the land is really busy.

Chairman Mao's poem: Three Stages, Three Goals

This poem "Qing Ping Le * Jiang Gui War" concisely and concisely explains the internal connection between the warlord chaos and the agrarian revolution, and the warlords and revolutionary people constituted the contradictory sides of Chinese society at that time.

It is precisely because this objective reality is reflected in the mind of the poet that the emotions expressed in the words are formed, and the hatred of the enemy and the love for the people are in stark contrast. "Dividing the land and dividing the land is really busy" portrays a scene of joy and activity, hinting at the high mood of the peasants who have turned over in the land reform. It revealed Chairman Mao's joy at the liberation of western Fujian.

The sky is high and the clouds are light, looking at the flying geese in the south.

Less than the Great Wall is not a good man, the trip is twenty thousand.

The peak of Liupan Mountain, the red flag swept the west wind.

Today the long wisp is in hand, when will it tie the dragon?

Chairman Mao's poem: Three Stages, Three Goals

This poem "Qing Ping Le * LiupanShan" was composed by Chairman Mao during the Long March, and the whole word fully expresses the firm revolutionary will and the fierce fighting spirit, which is extremely infectious. The words are full of optimism, foresight and strong self-confidence, precisely because Chairman Mao was not only a poet but also a great teacher, who personally participated in and led the Long March. That's why it's written with such grandeur! It's immersive to read.

Third, a singing rooster is white in the world, dare to teach the sun and the moon for a new day

After the founding of New China, Chairman Mao put forward the task of finding out how to build socialism in China, and carried out arduous explorations to open up a road of socialist construction suited to China's national conditions. He proposed to paint the most beautiful picture on the land of "poor and white" China.

Chairman Mao's poem: Three Stages, Three Goals

Long night is difficult to mingchi county day,

A hundred years of demonic dancing,

Half a billion people are not reunited.

A singing rooster is white,

Wanfang music is played in Khotan,

Poets will be even more advanced.

Reading this poem "Huan Xi Sha" reminds us of Mao Zedong's solemn proclamation at Tiananmen Square at the founding ceremony of the People's Republic of China: The Central People's Government of the People's Republic of China has been established, and the Chinese people, who account for a quarter of the total number of mankind, have since stood up!

Chairman Mao's poem: Three Stages, Three Goals

This thunderclap shook through the ages.

This word is precisely the artistic summary of this historical moment. A small order with only 42 words includes how rich the connotation is and what a magnificent image it has created. Chairman Mao has taken in these 42 words the storms and thunderstorms of the entire motherland over the past century, and the so-called observation of the past and the present is in a flash!

After liberation, the grand finale of Chairman Mao's poetry was "Water Tune Song Head" composed in May 1965. Re-enter Jinggangshan".

For a long time, Ling Yunzhi re-ascended Jinggang Mountain.

Thousands of miles to find the old place, the old look has become a new look.

Everywhere there are songs and swallows dancing, and there are more babbling water,

High road into the clouds.

After crossing the Yellow Ocean Boundary, the danger does not need to be seen.

The wind and thunder, the flag is fierce, it is a human world.

Thirty-eight years have passed, and it is a matter of time.

You can go up to the moon for nine days, you can catch turtles in the five oceans,

Talk about laughing triumph also.

There is nothing difficult in the world, as long as you can climb it.

Chairman Mao's poem: Three Stages, Three Goals

From the first trip to Jinggangshan in 1927 to the re-ascension to Jinggangshan in 1965, the time span is 38 years, recalling that when the Workers' and Peasants' Red Army planted the red flag on Jinggangshan, it was surrounded by the Kuomintang. "How long can the red flag be played?" This pessimistic tone is also heard from time to time in the ranks of the revolution.

In the end, the practice of the struggle gave the answer:

Starting from Jinggangshan, "the red flag leaps into the Tingjiang River and goes straight down to Longyan Shanghang";

Under the Wuyi Mountain, "the wind shows the red flag like a picture";

On Guangchang Road, "the wind swept the red flag over the big mark";

The Battle of Longgang, "Red Flag Chaos Under the Mountain of Buzhou";

On Liupan Mountain, "the red flag swept the west wind";

Until "a million male teachers cross the river"; "a singing rooster is white".

From Jinggangshan to Tiananmen, it is a long road; a hard and tortuous road; a road of victory!

Chairman Mao's poem: Three Stages, Three Goals

The pictures in this article come from Baidu search, and infringement must be deleted