Wang Shucao, published by the modern bookstore 65438-0933, shows the maturity of the author's poetic art. At this time, the poet lived in the white terror after the failure of the Great Revolution, and the contradiction between ideal and reality made him depressed and depressed. However, poets are no longer immature in art or psychology, nor are they walking in other people's shoes. Instead, I strive to open up my own poetry creation field and form my own style. In The Dreamcatcher, he wrote: "Your dream has blossomed/your dream has blossomed/when you have declined." Although this beautiful song still reveals the poet's tired state of mind, it tells people the true meaning of life: the realization of any beautiful ideal and the success of any career must be pursued at a lifetime's hard cost. During this period, Dai Wangshu was still lonely, depressed and sentimental, but there were also many poems with bright colors and unrestrained emotions. Such as "Sun Sacrifice", "Wandering Ballad" and "Village Girl". Even in some poems, we can read the poet's concern for ordinary people and his yearning for light. For example, "Running Water": "In a silent dusk/I see all the running water/heading in the same direction/heading for the hometown of the sun", the poem is full of longing for life, affirming invincible power and enthusiastically praising tenacious vitality.
1937 after the outbreak of the Anti-Japanese War, Dai Wangshu's poetic concept and creative practice have changed greatly, and he is determined to struggle in the gloomy climate of the enemy. Do a little lighting work with your own weak light. 1939 On New Year's Day, facing the Japanese imperialist aggression, he wrote "Happy New Year": "The new year brings us new strength/blessings! Our people/hard people/brave people/suffering will bring freedom and liberation. " This poem shows the poet's firm belief and optimistic attitude towards the people's struggle, and sings the true and strong patriotic feelings in the poet's heart. 1942, after Dai Wangshu was arrested and imprisoned by the Japanese invaders, his personal destiny merged with that of the motherland, and his poetic style changed. The Wall of Prison expresses the poet's courage and confidence in being generous to justice for national liberation. I Break My Palm is a tragic China sung by a poet in an iron prison: "I put all my strength in my palm/my love and all my hopes on it." In addition, The Eldest Daughter and Sunny Days show the poet's longing for a quiet life after years of exile. "They just condense like ice/will reopen like flowers one day" expresses confidence and hope for the future in his masterpiece Occasionally. In a word, Dai Wangshu's later poems have shown high-level connotation and vigorous vitality beyond personal feelings. "
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