Poems describing the Long March

Poems describing the Long March are as follows:

1, "Untitled"-Nie Rongzhen: Anshun grabbed the bridge, but most of them took it. The two armies are on the river. Luding must know. ?

2. "Untitled"-Yang Chengwu: Endless rainy night, crossing the natural moat. Torch according to the journey, flying soldiers seize Luding. ?

3, "Over the Grass"-Zhang Aiping: The green plains are endless, smoky, with knee-high crown and deep mire. Wild vegetables are cooked to warm the belly, and hay is burned to drive away the cold at night. Feel free to sit on the ground and sleep, lying down and watching the clouds turn over. Yin whispered tomorrow with a sword and a pillow. ?

4, "Long March"-Lin: Just across the grass to Ba 'a, there is no such west wind all the year round. I'm glad to see the new world. I'm not worried about food.

Less flax. Great apes are good at unwinding cables, while wild scorpions can shoot people. The road ahead is long, and no one dares to part. ?

5, "Thirty-fifth Birthday"-Chen Yi: The army went to the west like a rainbow, and the battle in the south was heavy. Half the rivers and mountains sink into the sea of blood, and how many friends turn into ants. People are still searching day and night, and thousands of ghosts are also men. Things will change extremely, and everything will be turned upside down.

The evolution of poetry:

Poetry is the sentence that constitutes poetry. Poetry usually limits the number of words in each sentence according to its format. China's earliest poems were structured with metrical poems, and the metrical requirements were strict. For example, the poems in the pre-Qin period are generally four words per sentence, which can be found in the Book of Songs.

Later, it developed into a five-character or seven-character rhythmic poem, which was found in Tang poetry. After the further development of economy and culture in Song and Yuan Dynasties, the content of poetry was gradually expanded and deduced. In the later period of the new-democratic revolution, poetry evolved into a free poem that was not limited by the number of words.