In the seventh paragraph, Tolstoy's eyes contain rich feelings. As the saying goes, the eyes are the windows of the soul, and Tolstoy's rich inner world is fully expressed through the eyes. "Changes in mood have caused changes in eyes." "Although the mouth is closed and there is no change, those eyes are full of smiles." In this passage, the author not only uses a lot of metaphors, but sometimes exaggerates them. He also uses two sets of parallelism sentences to describe what Tolstoy said: "The most emotional eyes on a person's face can best express all kinds of feelings": "Anger makes it cold, unhappiness makes it frozen, friendship makes it gentle, and passion makes it blazing." "Under the influence of beautiful and moving music, they can cry like village women. When they are spiritually satisfied, they can shine ","They can become cold and sharp, and they can uncover hidden secrets like scalpels and X-rays ". Finally, Gorky's words are quoted as the conclusion, which is concise and powerful, implicit and meaningful, and intriguing, which well shows Tolstoy's observation, sharpness and richness.
Paragraph 8: Write about the power of Tolstoy's eyes. "Fortunately, with such a pair of eyes, Tolstoy's face is full of talent. ..... The other parts of Tolstoy's face-beard, eyebrows and hair-are just used to package and protect the shells of this pair of shiny jewels. " At this point, we suddenly put down Tolstoy's vulgar appearance, which was originally used to protect exquisite jewelry-this is the artistic effect of wanting to promote first and then suppress. The author goes on to write: "This is the magic and magnetism of jewelry, which can suck in the material in the world, and then radiate radio waves with accurate frequency to our times ..." Here, the author's description of Tolstoy's eyes is no longer limited to portrait description, but implicitly reveals that Tolstoy, as a great realistic artist, gave an accurate, in-depth and comprehensive description of his time and became the spokesman of the times. "Even the smallest thing can be seen clearly with the help of this pair of lenses, just like a falcon falling from the sky and pouncing on a timid mouse, even the most trivial details. ..... When this pair of cold light daggers turned to aim at its owner, it was terrible, because the sharp blade mercilessly hit the key and hit its heart. " This passage is about the breadth and depth of Tolstoy's observation of society, life and times, as well as the depth and breadth of his criticism.