Huxiang poets refer to Wang Jingzhi, Ying Xiuren, Pan Mohua and Feng Xuefeng, and they are a group of China's new poems in the 1920s. They began to write poems around 192 1, set up the lakeside poetry club in the spring of 1922, published a collection of poems, Lakeside, in April of 1922, and published Wang Jingzhi's personal collection of poems, Wind of Hui, in May of the same year, and in June of 1927.
1923 published poems and songs. Their works are mainly lyrical short poems, the content of which is mostly to praise the fresh beauty of nature and the innocence of friendship and love. They show the young people who just broke away from the shackles of feudal ethics in the early days of the New Literature Movement's yearning for beautiful nature and happy love, and show the youthful personality and temperament of the May 4th new couple, with a unique simplicity, freshness and simplicity.
Zhu Ziqing called them young people who really devoted themselves to writing love poems, which were their main contribution to China's poems. The truly pure heroic images of self-expression in their poems are another manifestation of the spirit of personality liberation in the May 4th Movement. After Huxiang poets, Wei, Xie Danru, Lou Jiannan and others participated in the editing and publishing of February in zhina.
Influenced by Japanese short songs and haiku translated by Zhou Zuoren and Tagore's Birds translated by Zheng Zhenduo, the short poems of Bing Xin, Zong Baihua, Xu Yunuo and He Zhi are also popular for a while. Among them, Bing Xin's two episodes "Spring in the Stars" and Zong Baihua's "Walking Clouds" have great influence.
Feng Zhi is another important lyric poet in modern poetry. He is a member of Asakusa-Shenchong Society and later appeared in lake poets. His poems are in the form of semi-metrical poems, which have a neat and restrained beauty. Its poems are as clear and simple as simplicity, which contains passion and philosophy.
In the 1920s, because of the episode "Song of Yesterday", he was appraised as "the most outstanding lyric poet in China" by Lu Xun. In the 1940s, he further explored the art of poetry and wrote more groundbreaking sonnets.