Every word and sentence of this poetic Qiu Si in the Indian Ocean is permeated with the poet's world-famous tenderness and his fragile and frivolous temperament. In such places, near or far,
In grasping the painful image, the poet's delicate feelings or wandering, or sighing thoughtfully, always closes a word "love". The "sparkling moon" in the poet's mind is not lightly filled with sadness, but lightly stained with tears.
Xu Zhimo is the author of Qiu Si in the Indian Ocean, and an active and influential writer in China literary world. His world outlook has no dominant ideology, or he is a super-class "poet without party affiliation". Xu Beihong's poems are characterized by fresh words, harmonious rhythm, novel metaphors, rich imagination, beautiful artistic conception and rich changes. He pursues the neat beauty of art form and has a distinct artistic personality.
What are the outstanding features of Xu Zhimo's poems?
What are the outstanding features of Xu Zhimo's poetry creation? His poems are feminine, harmonious in rhyme and praise ideals. Express the pursuit of love and freedom. Good at subtle psychological capture,
The sentimental depiction is deeply loved by readers and has a lasting influence. Pursuing individuality liberation is the artistic individuality of Xu Zhimo's poems. Ingenious conception, fresh image, wonderful expression of the pursuit of sincere love and beautiful ideals.
In addition, his poems are harmonious in rhythm, full of musical beauty, flexible in composition, free in pen use, gorgeous in rhetoric, distinctive in style, and imaginative and elegant in prose. As a poet, Xu Zhimo,
He made some efforts in the exploration and pursuit of new poetry and made some achievements. He advocated that the works should express the author's own "nature and spirit" and demanded that poetry "be generated from bones and muscles, stimulated from blood, jumped from nature and spirit, and fluctuated from life".
Qiu Si in the Indian Ocean is an essay by modern poet Xu Zhimo, originally published in1February 29th, 922, Morning Post Supplement. This book explains the poet's love ideal by describing the story of "a drunken man and a woman" blessed by moonlight on the Ganges River in India.