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What have you learned from some people?
This poem was written by Cang Kejia, a famous modern poet in China, to commemorate the third anniversary of Lu Xun's death/KLOC-0 after the founding of New China in 1949, so it is subtitled "Feeling of Missing Lu Xun".

"Some people" is a thought-provoking topic-who do you mean? What about these people? The poem quoted two completely opposite people for comparison.

The whole poem consists of seven sections. The first section evaluates the life and death of two kinds of people, pointing out that some people are "alive" but actually dead; Some people are "dead". Although they are still alive, they will live in the hearts of the people forever. In the second to fourth quarters, these two men took diametrically opposite attitudes towards the people, praised the spirit of being an ox and a horse for the people, and lashed the decadent and arrogant reactionary rulers. Verses 5 to 7 describe people's completely different attitudes towards these two kinds of people. Those who serve the people, "the people will always remember him", and those who ride on the people's heads can only come to a sad end. The whole poem enthusiastically praises the spirit of loving the people and serving them wholeheartedly, and mercilessly lashes the reactionary rulers. The outstanding feature of poetry in expression is the use of contrast and repetition.

Many sentences in this poem are related to Lu Xun's character and articles. For example, reading "Bend Down and Make Cattle and Horses for the People",

It is natural to think of Lu Xun's famous saying "bow your head and be a willing ox"; Reading "Willing to be a Wild Grass, Waiting for the Underground Fire" will also be associated with Lu Xun's famous prose "Wild Grass".