Niu Han's representative long poem in 1942 is as follows:
Long poem: "Grassland of Ordos" (1942). Poetry collections: "Colorful Life" (1951), "Motherland", "In Front of the Motherland", "Butterfly on the Sea" (1985), "Silent Cliff" (1986), "Selected Poems of Niu Han" (1998), "Hot Springs" (1984) won the National Outstanding New Poetry Award.
Love and Song (1954), "Earthworms and Feathers", "Selected Lyrical Poems of Niu Han", "My First Book" (selected as the eighth textbook of the Chinese People's Education Press), " "South China Tiger" (selected as the seventh text in the Chinese textbook published by the People's Education Press), "Hundred Chinese Contemporary Literature Writers - Selected Poems of Niu Han", "Half a Tree", "Empty in the Distance", "Sweat-blooded Horse" ( Selected as the eighth class text of the People's Education Press), etc.
Niu Han (1922-September 29, 2013), whose real name was Shi Chenghan, later changed his name to Niu Han, and once used the pen name Gu Feng, was a native of Dingxiang County, Shanxi Province, and of Mongolian ethnicity. A famous modern poet, litterateur and writer, one of the representative poets of the "July" School. He began to publish literary works in 1940, mainly writing poems, and in the past 20 years, he also wrote prose.
He once served as the editor-in-chief of "New Literature History Materials", executive deputy editor-in-chief of "China", national honorary member of the Chinese Writers Association, and vice president of the Chinese Poetry Society. His poems such as "In Memory of a Maple Tree", "South China Tiger" and "Half a Tree" are widely read, and he has published "Niu Han Poetry Collection" and so on.
Biography of the character
His original name was Shi Chenghan. Because he could not write his own name correctly after attending elementary school for two years and always wrote the word "Cheng" incorrectly, his father changed his name to Shi Chenghan (in the article Mentioned in "My First Book"), he once used the pen name Gu Feng. His distant ancestors are Mongolian, and the reason for his original name is "Chenghan" is unknown.
Before the age of 14, he had been living in the countryside, herding cattle, collecting firewood, singing Yangko, practicing boxing, wrestling, making clay sculptures, playing the sheng, and getting into group fights. He was the naughtiest child in the village, with scars all over his body. fade away. My father was a middle school teacher with artistic temperament and democratic and liberal ideas. He attended Peking University during the Great Revolution and wrote old poems with considerable skill.