Biography: French poet. Aristocratic birth. Since his youth, he has been in and out of the palace and served as a page boy for the crown prince. Later, due to illness and hearing loss, he changed his aspiration to engage in diplomacy and military affairs and decided to write poetry, hoping to become famous through poetry and gain a prominent position. He studied assiduously ancient Greek and Roman literature and used Greek and Roman literature as a reference to innovate French poetry. In 1550, he published four volumes of "Ode Collection" and gained great reputation. In 1552, "The Love Song of Ronsard" came out, which included 183 sonnets expressing his love for the Italian girl Gasander. Published "Sequel to Love Songs" in 1555. In 1556, another "Love Song Continued" was published, which sang about the poet's nostalgia for another rural girl named Mary Dubin. From 1555 to 1556, he published a series of "Hymns"; from 1558 to 1563, he published several "Speech Poems", all of which were political poems. In 1572, he published the long poem "Franciade", which was imitated from Homer's epic poem. The poem has 24 cantos. Only the first four cantos were published, and the rest were unfinished. The purpose of this work is to praise the heroic deeds of the French nation in establishing a unified kingdom. Ronsard, who was 50 years old, wrote a love poem "Sonnet to Ellena" to his new love, Ellena, which is considered to be the best work of his love poems. A large part of Ronsa's works are court poems, including social works such as congratulating the king on his birthday and congratulating the queen on the birth of a child; the other part is love songs. His works handed down from generation to generation are all love poems. Ronsard was the first French poet laureate to write poems in his own language instead of Latin, but his poems were also recited in the courts of major European countries. He once organized the "Seven Stars Poetry Society" with his friends and disciples to advocate writing poetry in the French national language.