1. Jinan’s winter is sunny. What does Xiangqing mean here? 2. Set off a quiet and peaceful night. What does peace mean here?
The winter in Jinan is sunny. Xiangqing here means (the sky is) clear and refreshing. It creates a quiet and peaceful night. The peace here is calm and tranquil.
"Winter in Jinan"? This article describes Jinan's snow, mountains, city, and water through the description of Jinan's winter scenes and characteristics. It fully reflects the author's love for Jinan's winter, his love for the city of Jinan, and his love for nature, life, and life sentiments.
This is a poetic prose. Mr. Lao She has been lecturing in the UK for six years. The fog in the UK left a deep impression on him. Therefore, after coming to Jinan, he felt very strongly. The title "Jinan "Winter" points out the location and season. Tell readers that it is winter different from other places.
Jinan City, referred to as "Ji", also known as "Quancheng", is the capital of Shandong Province and one of the fifteen sub-provincial cities in the country. It is the central city in the southern wing of the Bohai Rim region and the political and political center of Shandong Province. Cultural, educational, economic, transportation and technological center. It is the headquarters of the army agency of the Northern Theater Command of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, the core city of the Shandong Peninsula urban agglomeration and the Jinan metropolitan area, and a new first-tier city.
Creative background:
Lao She came to Shandong around 1930 and taught at Qilu University in Jinan and Shandong University in Qingdao for 7 years. He developed a deep affection for Shandong. Shandong was Called his "second hometown". According to the memories of Lao She's wife, Hu Jieqing, during his lifetime, Lao She "often missed the years he spent in Shandong from his marriage to the outbreak of the Anti-Japanese War."
This article was written by Lao She in the spring of 1931 when he was teaching at Qilu University in Jinan. It was originally the fifth section of a series of long prose "Some Impressions" that directly described Jinan's scenic spots. It was published in the sixth issue of the European volume of "Qi Da Monthly" (published in April 1931).