First of all, the natural image reflects the concern for life:
In Gu Cheng's modern poems, especially in his early poems, there is always a detached "child" who is concerned about life. Wild flowers, moon stars, birds, beasts, insects and fish are common images in his poems.
Second, there are euphemistic and implicit expressions of satirical reality:
With the development of the times, his poems reflect on the ecological problems and the lack of humanistic spirit in the process of modern industrial civilization.
In "I always feel", the stars originally grew together like grapes, and human beings gathered together like a dish of colored beans, heart to heart like a nest of wild bees. From nature to man's external entity, it finally penetrated into man's heart and advanced step by step, expressing the poet's memories of primitive harmony and beauty and revealing his dissatisfaction with the trivial and complicated reality of the adult world.
Gu Cheng's introduction and relatives:
First, the character introduction:
Gu Cheng (1956 September 24th-1993 June 5438+001October 8th), male, originally from Shanghai,1956 was born in a poet's home in Beijing. He is an important representative of China's misty poetry school, and is known as a contemporary "Romantic" poet.
Gu Cheng has high attainments in new poetry, old-style poetry and fable poetry. The phrase "The night gave me black eyes/I used them to look for light" of his generation became a classic sentence in China's new poems.
Second, relatives and members.
Father: Gu Gong, an outstanding military writer and poet, formerly known as Gu Julou, joined the New Fourth Army, and later worked as a screenwriter of Bayi Film Studio and editor of the People's Liberation Army newspaper.
Spouse: Xie Ye, born in 1958, married Gu Cheng in 1983, gave birth to a son, and was killed by her husband Gu Cheng in New Zealand on 1993/0/0.
Child: Mulberry, a college student in Auckland, New Zealand, majoring in engineering.
Sister: Gu Xiang lives on an island in New Zealand.