1. In the novel Childhood, my grandmother is a very caring and intelligent person. She often takes care of and helps people and animals in need. Once, she found an injured myna in the garden. Its wing is hurt and it can't fly. Grandma immediately decided to save the poor bird.
Grandma took myna home, cleaned her wounds and fed her. Under her careful care, myna's wound gradually healed and began to recover. Grandma is very patient with myna. She often talks to her and sings to her. Gradually, myna and grandma became close and began to imitate grandma's voice and intonation.
This experience has a profound influence on the protagonist in childhood. She learned love, care and patience from her grandmother. These values have played a positive role in guiding her growth. Close contact with myna also inspired her love for animals and awe of nature. This experience became one of the unforgettable memories in her life.
Introduction to the book Childhood.
1. This book is an autobiographical novel by Soviet writer Maxim Gorky, which tells the story of the childhood life of the protagonist Aletha in a family full of contradictions and violence. Childhood is the first part of Gorky's autobiographical trilogy, from 190 1 to 1902.
2. Maxim Gorky is the founder of Soviet realistic literature and Soviet literature. His parents died young, and his grandfather and grandmother were his earliest caregivers. Gorky only attended primary school in his early years, entered Kazan University in 1884, dropped out of school in 1888 due to financial difficulties, and later worked as a child welfare worker in Kazan slums.
This novel is the first of three autobiographical novels based on the author's childhood experience. By describing the childhood life of the protagonist Aletha, it reflects some typical characteristics of social life at that time, especially the suffocating dark society before the October Revolution in Russia.
The novel shows a childlike, innocent and happy childhood through a child's eyes. In this work, Aletha experienced the ups and downs of his childhood, and at the same time described the poor life scene of the busy urban underclass with children's eyes.