Dewdrops jump down from the lotus leaf. Is that the footsteps in the morning?
Leaves fall from the arms of branches. Is that the tail of autumn?
The willow is combing the green buds. Is that spring hair?
Birds get out of the house and get together to chirp. Is that a spring song?
From: The grass sticks its head out of the ground. Are those spring eyebrows? This sentence can be regarded as personification and metaphor. The grass sticking out of the ground is anthropomorphic. The eyebrows in spring are metaphors. Therefore, imitation writing should also have metaphors and personification.
Metaphor is to compare one thing with another according to the similarity between things (the thought object is similar to other things), to concretize the abstract things and to simplify the profound truth (to compare the thought object with other things, that is, to compare one thing or situation with another).
Personification refers to a rhetorical device that imitates things (including objects, animals, ideas or abstract concepts) into adults, making them have human appearance, personality or emotion. That is to say, treat things as people, and write with feelings, words and actions like people.