Who is the ancestor of war-weary poetry through the ages?

"Plucking Wei". "Xiaoya Caiwei" is a poem in the ancient Chinese realist poetry collection "The Book of Songs". This is a poem describing war. It expresses the hardship of life on the border by describing what a border soldier who suffered the suffering of war saw, heard, and thought during the Western Zhou Dynasty. It expresses the border guards' longing for their hometown and their patriotism. "Plucking Wei" is also the ancestor of war-weary poetry through the ages. The Book of Songs is the earliest collection of poems in China, with a total of 305 poems (another 6 Sheng poems, with words but no words). It was called "Shi" or "Three Hundred Poems" in the Zhou Dynasty and was written in the Eastern Zhou Dynasty. . The poetry in The Book of Songs comes partly from collected folk poems and partly from poems presented by officials.