1942 to 195 1 Editor-in-Chief of Wanbao (formerly known as Republic of China Daily), a supplement of Tunxi Edition. One day, a magazine published an article for senior high school students, entitled "Lou Tou Yue". The student was "slapped in the face" and Wen was arrested. Wen was released through the mediation of the Southern Anhui Office of the Organization Department of the Provincial Party Committee.
Extended data:
When I was a teenager, I moved to Hangzhou with my mother, and I was a talented woman in autumn. Since then, I have embarked on the road of professional literati.
After the outbreak of the Anti-Japanese War, Wen was active as a war correspondent in southern Anhui, Guilin and Chongqing, and his poems, essays and translations were published from time to time. Later, he worked underground in Shanghai, pen name Wang Er, and worked as a text editor in Shanghai Haitangdi Bookstore. After the liberation of Shanghai, due to his poor family, his superiors allowed him to continue to work part-time in Tangdi Bookstore.
After liberation, Wen worked in People's Literature Publishing House, and 1953 was transferred to China Youth Art Theatre. In the early days of liberation, Wen gave lectures in Beijing Normal University and other institutions, and participated in china national radio's classical poetry recitation program for four consecutive years.
References:
Baidu encyclopedia-text