Guo Moruo's representative works include Flowers of Tang Di, Peacock Gallbladder, Phoenix, Starry Sky, Before and After Anyway, Crescent Moon and White Clouds, etc.
Guo Moruo (1892165438+10/6-65438+6 12 0978), a young Bao literati, was originally named Kai Zhen, Zi Tang Ding, Shang Wu and China's new poems.
The editor-in-chief has a collection of China's Historical Manuscripts and Oracle Bone Inscriptions's Collected Works, all of which are included in the Complete Works of Guo Moruo in 38 volumes. Guo Moruo won the Stalin International Prize 1952 on April 9 for "strengthening international peace".
Personality thought:
Guo Moruo's poems are all written in a certain background to express his thoughts, and Starry Sky is one of them. The poem Starry Sky seems to describe the starry sky. However, after careful study, you will find that Guo Moruo's loneliness and sadness are in the poem. Although there is sadness in the poem, I still see hope and fill it with tomorrow.
1958, Guo Moruo published a collection of poems, Let a Hundred Flowers Bloom. He wrote a total of * * * 10 1 poem on the topic of Hundred Flowers. This is because Guo Moruo expressed his feelings with flowers as the theme and their characteristics as the starting point, and attached words to natural phenomena to express his ambitions.