Guo Lusheng (Chinese: 郭路生, born 1948 Shandong), pen name Shi Zhi (食指, index finger), was an influential Chinese poet of the 1960s, considered the "founder of the New Poetry movement".
His poems were the first to break with the Mao Zedong-style classicist poetry, expressing the "bewilderment of the Red Guard generation". Young readers spread his poems widely in hand-copied form, and he was one of the mascots of the zhiqing generation - educated youth who were sent to the countryside during the cultural revolution. This underground poetry movement continued over the next 30 years, and he inspired several modern movements including the Misty poets.
Guo Lusheng's father, Guo Yunxuan, was in the Red Army, and like the wives of many Red Army soldiers, his mother was accompanying the army, when he was born by the roadside during a bitter winter march in 1948. The name Lusheng means "born on the road".
He started writing poetry early, and came into attention of the authorities for his poetry, which were noted for their "bourgeois values" by an admiring teacher at school. Along with Zhang Langlang and Mu Dunbai, he was a member of the underground literature group ‘Sun Fleet’, which was broken up in 1966, with many of the members committing suicide or receiving death sentences; Guo himself was arrested and beaten up
You closed your eyes just to kill the conversation it's raining forever
I think i'll drown myself with my tears
why does it have to be like this? so it doesn't mean anything to you so do you want to see loyalty? are these tears not enough for you?
by the sound of your message i felt you meant goodbye
the raining is never ending clutching my emotions remembering the moments passed
why does it have to be like this? so it doesn't mean anything to you so do you want to see loyalty? are these tears not enough for you?
I thought it was okay my feelings unfolded right before my eyes
what did your embraces mean?
did you mean it when you called my name.