Representative works of western poetry

The representative works of western poetry are as follows:

1, before dawn (/Eliot)

Oriental grey clouds and red clouds weave, and the flowers on the windowsill turn to face the dawn, one petal after another, waiting for the sunshine, flowers, withered flowers and blooming flowers of the dawn. The flowers are in full bloom this morning, yesterday's flowers are in full bloom in the morning, and the room is full of fragrant blue flowers, flowers, withered flowers and dawn flowers.

2. Even if the world has changed (/Rilke)

Even if the world changes and the situation is generally rapid, all the completed events go back to ancient times, which is beyond change and progress. The song in front of your song flies wider and more freely, and God plays his piano. Suffering has not been recognized, love has not been learned, and distant things in the land of death have not been uncovered.

Poetry is a literary genre that expresses feelings and wishes. It is a literary genre with a certain rhythm and rhythm, which vividly expresses the author's rich emotions in highly concise language and reflects the social life in a concentrated way.

Shi Mao's preface records: "Poets are also ambitious places. Have ambition in your heart and speak like a poem. " Yan Yu's Poems on Canglang in the Southern Song Dynasty says: Poets chant temperament. The art of expressing only in words is poetry.

Introduction:

In ancient Han Dynasty, unhappy people were called poems and happy people were called songs. In modern times, they are generally called poems. It expresses social life and people's spiritual world according to certain syllables and rhythms. The origin of poetry can be traced back to ancient times. The Book of Songs is China's first collection of poems, which is said to have been compiled by Confucius. There is still debate on this issue in academic circles.

Chinese poetry experienced the development of Yuefu, Tang poetry, Song ci and Yuan Qu in the Han, Wei and Six Dynasties. Han Xunyue's "Han Ji Hui Diji" is a preface for Han Yu Yun Zhou Xitang in the Tang Dynasty: "Although the works of thinking about Tang Dynasty are said to have words but no poems, they are based on Tao to connect the people of the country without examination." Wang Zhen-Ze's Chief Executive System in Ming Dynasty: "The Hanlin in Tang and Song Dynasties is a very deep and strict place, and many poets have it."