Why are there no rhymes and punctuation in modern poetry?

Like classical poetry, punctuation is necessary, because in classical poetry, poetry has a strong text format ... and without punctuation, it will also cause difficulties in reading and understanding ... Modern poetry generally does not have this problem. ...

Modern poetry can be punctuated ... depending on the specific situation ... which is usually unnecessary ... but many poems use exclamation marks to emphasize the tone. ...

Modern poetry has broken through the shackles of old-style poetry, the language tends to be colloquial and informal, and the distance between language and prose has been shortened, but it still has its own characteristics.

Abbreviations refer to places where punctuation marks should be used according to general modern Chinese norms, but they are omitted. According to the scope of ellipsis, there are two forms of expression.

1, all omitted. In this kind of poem, there is no punctuation at the end of the line, and there is no punctuation at the interval between phrases and sentences in the line (as spaces), although it should be pause, question, sigh or hint in semantic tone. This kind of poetry is more common in professional poetry periodicals and poetry selection periodicals, and is mostly adopted by modernist poets, with a small overall number.

2. Partial omission. Punctuations in this kind of poems are left out where they should be used, and some are still in use. This phenomenon is more complicated, and there are roughly three main forms: one is that the end of a line is used in the middle of a line, the other is used at the end of a line, and some are not, as shown in the following example:1; The other is used with the branches of a poem. In a complete poem, the sentence branches intermittently without punctuation at the end of the line, but after the complete sentence.

Example 1:

When I was a child, I used to lie in front of the window and daydream.

-What's that over there?

My mother told me: the sea

Oh, is that the sea beyond the mountain? (On the other side of the mountain, the seventh grade)