What is the difference between ancient poetry and modern poetry (for a complete answer)

The teaching of modern vernacular poetry is mainly to feel and understand the author's feelings. The teaching of ancient poetry should first understand the meaning of ancient Chinese and connect it with the background of the times. We should put ancient poems in the specific background of the times and the author's situation at that time to understand the thoughts and feelings of poetry and the artistic conception of poetry. Now the specific differences are analyzed as follows: 1. The content and background are different. With its concise language, rich imagination and sincere feelings, ancient poetry has become a beautiful landscape in the cultural history of China. From "Three Hundred Poems", through Chu Ci, Han Yuefu, Wei, Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties' poems, to Tang Poetry and Song Poetry Yuan Qu, there are endless poetic creations. People have forgotten that "the river of no return, the waves are exhausted, the romantic figures of the ages", "picking chrysanthemums under the fence, leisurely seeing Nanshan", living in seclusion in the mountains, "the sun sets, the horizon is heartbroken", "the wine and meat in Zhumen stink, and the bones are frozen on the road", which is a kind of mourning for people's livelihood. His feelings are sincere and moving, and his words are thought-provoking Modern new poetry is gradually developed and formed on the basis of inheriting and carrying forward the excellent traditions of folk songs and China classical poetry, and drawing on and absorbing the expressive techniques and skills of western poetry. It has the characteristics of free form, flexible rhythm and natural freshness. New poetry is expressed in its own unique language ("the poet's language"), which is highly concise, leaping and suggestive. "The husband's essays are lyrical, and the readers wear essays into the artistic conception, and they seek the source along the waves, although it will be obvious." (Liu Xie, "Wen Xin Diao Long? This passage by Liu Xie tells us that when writers and poets create, they first have the impulse to express their feelings, and then they form works for words. Readers should first understand the feelings conveyed by works through words.