Welcome to Chinese poetry - March 2005
There are, however, still poets who write not to sell but to celebrate all the intricacy of what we do and think and feel on this small blue planet. Song Xiaoxian, the latest addition to the China domain of Poetry International Web, was one poet I came across in the Yearbook who struck me as having a voice worth listening to. Regular visitors to this site will see connections between his work and that of others we have already published. Like {id="972" title="Sheng Xing"}, {id="972" title="Shuijing Zhulian"} and {id="976" title="Yi Sha"}, Song Xiaoxian cares little for linguistic inventiveness or imagistic splendour. Instead, he deals simply with events from his own plain life-history—events that made him feel something out of the ordinary. He tends instinctively towards minimalism. He writes about sexual love, about a sense of the divine, about humanity’s inhumanity to itself and other species in short poems in which no word is wasted. The result: compressed poems, deceptively slight, that stick to your clothes like burrs and grass seeds and won’t be shaken off easily.
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