This poem is a famous saying of teacher Li Kuchan. It is widely criticized as "striving for strength", which means that if a bird wants to fly high in the sky, it must first learn how to flap its wings; If people want to make progress, they must first enrich their knowledge.
This poem tells us that if we want to have a good development and a good future, we must first study hard and make up for our shortcomings through continuous learning. Books are our indispensable spiritual food, guiding our direction and road.
Introduction to Li Kuchan:
Li Kuchan (1899 65438+1October1-1983 June 1 1), formerly known as Yingjie, was renamed Ying, a native of Gaotang, Shandong. He is a modern painter and art educator.
Born in poverty, he was influenced by the traditional culture of his hometown and embarked on an artistic journey. 1923, with Bai Qi and Baishi as the teacher. He used to be a professor of Hangzhou Art College, a professor of Central Academy of Fine Arts, a director of China Artists Association and an academician of China Painting Academy.
He is good at painting flowers, birds and eagles, and often makes huge screens in his later years. His representative works include: Hesheng, Eagle Map, Song Yingtu, Zhu Lan, Sunny Snow Map and Waterbirds Map. Li Kuchan's paintings were published on 1978. 1June, 983, Li Kuchan passed away.
If a bird wants to fly high, it should flap its wings first.
1, although it's hard, it's hard to blow out wild sand before it's golden. -Tang Liu Yuxi's Nine Poems of Langtaosha
Interpretation: Gold panning needs to be filtered thousands of times. Although it is hard, only when the precipitation is exhausted will the shining gold be revealed.
2, reading thousands of books, writing like a god. -Tang Du Fu's "Twenty-two Rhymes for Wei Zuocheng"
Interpretation: The more you read, the more things you accumulate in your mind. Writing articles is naturally handy, just like a stroke of genius.