The writing method of new poetry

Essentials of modern poetry writing;

1, the ideological structure of expression or narration should be clear.

2. condensed sentence: the language should be concise and concise.

3, artistic conception: to be far-reaching, leave blank, give people imagination.

4. Expression: Expressing ambition by things and expressing emotion by scenery.

5. The rhythm is distinct: the ups and downs, reduplication and redundancy of sentence patterns are all rhythmic.

6, rhythm: that is, the rhyme of each sentence should be coordinated.

7, take a look: emotional output, to use the soul to interpret emotions, produce * * * vibration and * * * sound.

Writing skills of modern poetry;

1. Learning sets of sentences is to put high-quality poetry sentences together after self-integration, but it is not plagiarism.

2, learn to borrow words, better poetry, there are a few bright words, learn to combine your own sentences according to the words.

For example, crushing, farewell to Cambridge, wandering back, and splendor in A Farewell to Cambridge, such as harvesting, swaying, being possessed by demons and pretending to be like smoke in A Life Like Summer Flowers.

3. What are the common writing techniques of modern poetry?

1) metonymy: You don't directly say the names of people and things, but borrow the names of other things as metaphors.

Metonymy can be divided into people (you can use positions or nicknames for metonymy, such as the names of Du Shaofu's representative figures), things (you can use the names of related things for metonymy, such as "How to solve your worries, only Du Kang", "Du Kang" is a name, and metonymy is "wine") and things (you can use the names of related things for metonymy, such as "beacon smoke" to refer to war).

2) metaphor: use another thing as a metaphor to express this thing.

Metaphor can be divided into simile (often used as a conjunction such as, similarity, if, comparison), metaphor (often used as a conjunction such as, for, success) and metonymy (used as a metaphor by a third party, such as hometown, replaced by mulberry).

3) Exaggeration: Grasping the object of description, exaggerating or emphasizing description. For example, compare the canvas to the blue sky.

4) Allusions: Cite historical allusions, myths and legends, etc. For example, the legend of cuckoo crying blood.

5) Overlap: Repeatedly emphasize and emphasize the tone, and the meaning remains unchanged after overlapping. For example: just, just.

6) parallelism: arrange similar sentences to form the same sentence structure. For example: when the spring breeze is derived in the heart, when the mulberry leaves brush the eyes, when the clouds are branded on the soles of the feet.