What's the difference between ancient poetry, ancient poetry, modern poetry and modern poetry?

First, according to different times, poetry can be divided into classical poetry and modern poetry. Let's talk about the difference between ancient poetry and modern poetry:

1, times have changed. Ancient poetry refers to 1840 China's poems before the Opium War. Modern poetry is also called new poetry.

2. Different language forms. Ancient poems pay attention to meter, rhyme, level, neatness and neatness, and use refined words, and most of them have some rhymes at the end of sentences or sentences, with the same number of words per line; Modern poems vary in length, free and lively without strict rhyme, and the language is close to spoken language, and there is no limit to the number of words per line.

Second, ancient poetry is divided into ancient poetry and modern poetry. Let's talk about the difference between ancient poetry and modern poetry:

1, time is different. Taking the Tang Dynasty as the boundary, the poems before the Tang Dynasty were all ancient poems, and after the Tang Dynasty, the ancient poems gradually declined and died out. Therefore, after the Tang Dynasty, most of them were modern poems.

2. Syntactically, the number of words in each sentence of classical poetry is different, and the number of sentences in each poem can be different. Modern poetry has only five words and seven words (four quatrains and eight rhymes). More than eight sentences are excluded or called long method. )

3. Different rhymes. Each ancient poem can use one rhyme or two or more rhymes, that is, it can change in a poem. Modern poetry can only use one rhyme, no matter how long it is arranged, it can't be changed. Classical poetry can rhyme even sentences, or even odd sentences. Modern poetry rhymes only on even sentences (except the first sentence, which can be bet or not) ) Classical poetry can rhyme in both flat and even tones. Modern poetry, on the other hand, can only use flat and even rhymes.

4. Training is different. Classical poetry is not particular. Modern poetry is very particular. In metrical poems, the first and second sentences are the first couplet, the third and fourth sentences are the parallel couplet, the fifth and sixth sentences are the neck couplet, and the seventh and eighth sentences are the tail couplet. Parallel prose and neck couplets must have the same sentence pattern, relative part of speech, and even. Very neat. In fact, three, four, five and six are two excellent couplets.