Dai Wangshu (1905.3.5 ~ 1950.2.28) modern poet. Also known as the "Rain Lane Poet", he is a Chinese modern symbolist poet. Dai Wangshu is the pen name, his original name is Dai Chaoan, also known as Dai Mengou. The pen names are Ai Angfu, Jiang En, etc. A native of Hang County, Zhejiang Province (now Yuhang District, Hangzhou City). His pen name comes from Qu Yuan's "Li Sao": "Wangshu in the front makes the pioneer come, and Fei Lian makes the subordinate rush in the back." It means that Qu Yuan went to heaven and earth to roam and seek, sitting in a chariot drawn by a dragon, with the moon god Wangshu in front. Open the way, followed by Feilian, the god of wind. Wangshu is the god who drives the moon in myths and legends. He is beautiful, gentle, pure and elegant. He went to France to study and was influenced by French Symbolist poets.
Xi Murong, Mongolian, famous poet, essayist and painter.
Xi Murong's full name is Mulun Xi Lianbo, which means big river. "Murong" is a homonym of "Mulun". He was born on October 15, 1943 in Jingangpo, a suburb of Chongqing, Sichuan, and his ancestral home is Ming'an Banner, Chahar League, Inner Mongolia.
Writing poetry is just a way to rest after a tiring day. She wrote poems to "commemorate a period of time gone by, to commemorate the small world that only existed in my heart." The word "true" is cast in the poem and has a distinct personality. Her poems are full of understanding and understanding of human feelings, love and nostalgia. He has written more than 50 kinds of poetry collections, essay collections, picture albums and anthologies, with readers at home and abroad. In the past ten years, I have devoted myself to exploring Mongolian culture, taking my hometown as the theme of my creations. In 2002, he was appointed as an honorary professor of Inner Mongolia University. The new work "Xi Murong and Her Inner Mongolia" uses beautiful words and photos taken by herself to record Xi Murong's 17-year pursuit of nomadic culture since her encounter with her "original hometown" in 1989.
Main works:
"Qili Xiang" (poetry), "Youth without Resentment" (poetry), "Nine Chapters of Time" (poetry), "Edge Light and Shadow" (poetry) , "Lost Poems" (poetry), "I Fold My Love" (poetry), "Three Strings" (short piece), "There is a Song" (prose), "Tongxinji" (prose), "Written to Happiness" ” (prose), “The Country is Waiting” (prose), “Xi Murong and Her Inner Mongolia” (photography + text)
Cao Yu, formerly known as Wan Jiabao, also named Xiaoshi, was born in Qianjiang, Hubei Province, in the second year of Xuantong in the Qing Dynasty. Born in Tianjin on August 21 (September 24, 1910), he was nicknamed "Little Baby" when he was studying in Tsinghua University.
"Cao Yu" was the pen name he first used when he published a novel in 1926 (the prefix "Cao" in the traditional Chinese character for "Wan" in his surname is homophonic to "Cao"). Cao Yu is "an audience member of civilized drama, an amateur actor who loves American drama, and a playwright under the influence of left-wing drama" (Sun Qingsheng: "On Cao Yu", Peking University Press, 1986). This sentence roughly summarizes Cao Yu's dramatic life.
Cao Yu*** has three wives, the first wife Zheng Xiu, the second wife Fang Rui, and the last wife Li Yuru is a famous Peking Opera actor. Cao Yu*** has 4 daughters. Zheng Xiu was born - Wan Dai, Wan Zhao (musician), Fang Rui was born - Wan Fang (playwright), Wan Huan.