The poem "The Beast" is Huang Xiang's most representative work. It not only truly reflects Huang Xiang's spiritual characteristics in the 1960s and 1970s, but is also quite successful in terms of artistic creation and aesthetic meaning.
I am not the only one who was shocked when I first read Huang Xiang's poem "Beast". The word "Beast" itself is eye-catching and shocking. It is the first thing that people think of. It's the kind of madness and bestiality that runs through the wilderness, thirsting for blood and eating meat.
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The poet uses these two words as the title. What kind of bloody and violent life is this? It wasn't until I read "The Beast" repeatedly that I truly understood those roars. When my eyes followed the lines of pain, anger, panic, anxiety, and frenzy... they settled on the two words "bones" and "throat." When you use this word, you don't need any basis to draw your own conclusion: this "beast" has the fearless spirit to destroy everything.