Bian Zhilin (1910-1968) was a famous poet and writer in China, known as the "Father of Modern Poetry". His poetry style was fresh and natural, full of thoughts and feelings about life, love, nature and humanity. Bian Zhilin's writing background can be traced back to his teenage years when he was studying at Peking University in China. He was influenced by western culture and began to come into contact with modernist poetry. In 1937, the Japanese invaders occupied Beijing. Bian Zhilin was forced to leave the school and go into exile in Hong Kong. After that, he lived in Hong Kong and the mainland of China for a long time, engaged in literary activities while missing his hometown. Bian Zhilin's poetry creation began in the 1940s, when he began to pay attention to social reality and philosophy of life, and wrote many poems reflecting social conditions and human nature. In the 1950s, he began to explore the relationship between nature and poetry and wrote many poems about nature and human nature. In the 1960s, Bian Zhilin's poetry style became more concise, fresh, and natural, full of thoughts and feelings about life and humanity. Bian Zhilin's introduction is as follows: Bian Zhilin (1910-1968) was a famous poet and writer in China, known as the "father of modern poetry." His poetry style was fresh and natural, full of thoughts and feelings about life, love, nature and humanity. Bian Zhilin was born in Nanjing, Jiangsu Province. She studied in Japan in her early years and was influenced by Western culture. He began to explore the relationship between nature and poetry in the 1940s and 1950s, and wrote many poems about nature and human nature. In the 1960s, his poetry style became more concise, fresh, and natural, full of thoughts and feelings about life and humanity. Bian Zhilin's poems have a high reputation in China and around the world. They have been translated into many languages and are regarded as one of the representative works of modern Chinese poetry.