The characteristics of Su Shi's poems are: majestic and passionate style. Su Shi created the style of bold and unconstrained ci, and is the representative of bold and unconstrained ci. He can express generosity with magnificent images and integrate passionate or tragic passion into his words.
Su Shi was a literary leader in the mid-Northern Song Dynasty, and made great achievements in poetry, ci, writing, calligraphy and painting. Vertical and horizontal text; Poetry has a wide range of themes, fresh and healthy, uses exaggerated metaphors and has a unique style. Also known as "Su Huang" with Huang Tingjian. Ci is an uninhibited school, and Xin Qiji is the representative of the uninhibited school, also known as "Su Xin"; Prose writing is rich and unrestrained, and he is also called "Ou Su" with Ouyang Xiu, and is one of the "Eight Masters in Tang and Song Dynasties".
Su Shi's views on society and thoughts on life are undisguised in his literary works, among which poetry is the most hearty. In more than 2,700 Su poems, the theme of intervening in social reality and thinking about life is very prominent. Su Shi's attitude towards various unreasonable phenomena in social reality is "out of date", and he always regards criticizing reality as an important theme of his poems.
Su Shi is a caring and helpful person. He criticized and mocked all kinds of unreasonable phenomena in social reality, and always regarded criticizing reality as an important theme of his poetry creation. He became an official and was demoted many times. He has the opportunity to get in touch with the lower classes, and often writes down the sufferings of the people he has heard and seen in his poems.
For example, the Yellow Emperor was sent to Zhejiang to write about the hardships of people in Jiangsu and Zhejiang after the flood, Night Cow's Mouth wrote about the hardships of residents along the Yangtze River, and Wu Zhong Tian Tan reflected the situation of exorbitant taxes and miscellaneous fees and low grain prices hurting farmers at that time. These works reflect Su Shi's concern for people's sufferings from one side.