"Song of Making Friends" tells the story of the author's night outing on the university campus. It reflects all kinds of people and things in social life through dialogues, exchanges, quarrels and questions between two students, crows, wild cats, mice, Nightcrawler and the author himself. It has realistic pertinence and should express the author's attitude and viewpoint. At the same time, a series of rhetorical questions are put forward to people, which is thought-provoking.
This is a realistic and critical poem, pointing to some extreme and empty expressions in the network age. Perhaps the only drawback is that there are fewer positive praises. Perhaps, this is the limitation of this genre of criticizing reality, and irony is more than affirmation. Of course, we can only understand a little of the master's pen and ink, but it is a matter of opinion.
Speaking of Mo Yan's award-winning Song of Jiaozi, people can't help but think of two famous ancient China songs, one is Bai Juyi's Song of Eternal Sorrow, and the other is Liu Bowen's Song of Cooking. By simple comparison, Bai Juyi's "Song of Eternal Sorrow" has a good rhythm and describes a true and beautiful love story, which can be called a swan song throughout the ages; Liu Bowen's scone song is a mysterious prophecy like a gobbledygook, which is difficult for ordinary people to understand. Mo Yan's Song of the Jiaozi is easy to understand. Told a campus night joke, which was full of irony.
In addition, Mo Yan's Song of Jiaozi also learned a way of writing A Dream of Red Mansions, in which four poems are used at the beginning and end, but one is a five-character poem, one is a poem and the other is a poem. ...