Talk about the "tension" in Mu Dan's poems

The inherent tension and drama in poetry often organize a series of words and images full of confrontation and conflict to form intricate, complex and strong lyrical forms. In Mu Dan's poem, we can find three groups of words with different tones. One is strong and dynamic: flame, sway, desire, embrace, resist, stretch, push, ignite; the other is static: green, earth, seeing, refuge; this is the opposition between grass and flowers, the inner opposition of spring ; It is also the opposition between "awakening" and "bewitchment", and the opposition between the restless desires of adolescence and the poet's contemplative image. "Window" is a medium that separates and connects "desire" and "seeing", thus bringing about a third group of words that embody the existence of tension: close, curl, and combine. These three groups of vocabulary are intertwined with each other, forming the basic framework of the poem, and also laying the foundation for the poem's serious, solid, and modern lyrical tone; compact and tense language; as well as full rhythm and concentrated imagery. So, what exactly is spring like? It is waking up, the first birth and rebirth, but it is also the temptation of desire and addiction; it is soaring song and open joy, it is also stagnant soil and closed body; it is burning, dispersion, resistance, and dispersion. Then new combinations and rebirth. It is the spring of nature and the youth of life. It is the sprouting of the poet's spring heart and the flourishing of his poetic heart. The trinity of dawn, early spring, and twenty-year-old youth is just like the nakedness of light, shadow, sound, and color, and the openness of senses and thoughts. They are waiting for the emergence of new combinations. Mu Dan's poems can be described as poems with truly modern significance. The setting of metaphors and images makes it impossible for his poems to be read as smoothly as Xu Zhimo's poems, and more difficult to understand than Tang poetry and Song lyrics in classical language. When Mu Dan's poems are difficult to read, they are reminiscent of Li He of the Tang Dynasty.