Current location - Education and Training Encyclopedia - Resume - Who is Dai Wangshu?
Who is Dai Wangshu?
Dai Wangshu is a modernist symbolist poet and translator in China.

Dai Wangshu (1905165438+1October15-1February 28th, 950), male, named Cheng,No. Chao 'an, posthumous title Haishan, from Hangzhou, Zhejiang. Later, he used pen names Meng Ou, Meng Ou Sheng, Fang Xin and Jiang Si. Graduated from Fudan University. China modernist symbolist poet and translator.

He has published three novels in Mandarin Duck and Butterfly School: Debt, Artist Boy and Motherly Love. He once joined Du Heng, Zhang Tianyi and Shi Zhecun to form the "Lanshe" literary group and founded You Lan magazine. Masterpieces such as Rain Lane and My Memory.

1950 On February 28th, Dai Wangshu died in Beijing at the age of 45.

Rain Alley

Yi Dai yi Wang Shu

Holding an oil-paper umbrella alone

Wandering in the long, long

Lonely rain lane,

I hope to see

Like cloves.

A girl with a grudge.

She does.

Clove-like color,

Lilac-like fragrance,

Sad as cloves,

Mourning in the rain,

Sadness and hesitation;

She lingers in this lonely rain lane,

Hold an oil-paper umbrella

Like me,

Like me.

In silence,

Cold, sad, melancholy.

She approached quietly.

Get close and throw again.

Breathing eyes,

She floated by.

Like a dream,

Sad and confused like a dream.

Floating like a dream

A lilac,

I passed this girl by;

She went away silently, far away,

A crumbling fence,

Walk through this rainy path.

In the lamentation of the rain,

Remove her color,

Scattered her fragrance.

Disappeared, even hers

Breathing eyes,

Lilac is melancholy.

Holding an oil-paper umbrella alone

Wandering in the long, long

Lonely rain lane,

I hope to float over.

Like cloves.

A girl with a grudge.

Rain Lane is a modern poem written by the poet Dai Wangshu in 1927. The poem describes the lyric hero "holding an oil-paper umbrella" and wandering alone in a long and lonely rain lane.

In Rain Lane, the poet used symbolic images and image group to construct lyrical space, conveyed inner feelings, and integrated the artistic nutrition of China's ancient poems, especially the graceful poems in the late Tang Dynasty and the Five Dynasties.