Yu Pingbo's ancestry can be traced to
Deqing,
Zhejiang. His pet name as a child was
Sengbao (). He was a descendant of
Yu Yue, a renowned scholar during the late
Qing period, and Yu Pingbo was trained in the Chinese classics from an early age. In 1915, he qualified by examination for a preparatory course at
Peking University, where he became one of
Hu Shih's most prominent students. In 1917, he married Xu Baoxun (), a gifted female scholar from
Hangzhou, and then commenced composing melodies for
Kunqu operas. Meanwhile, he temporarily immersed himself in the
New Culture Movement, and in 1918 his first New Culture period poem
Spring Waters (春水
Chūnshuĭ) was published alongside
Lu Xun's "
Diary of a Madman" in
La Jeunesse, becoming one of the pioneering compositions to be written in contemporary Chinese vernacular. That same year, he established with classmates
Fu Sinian,
Luo Jialun and others the
New Wave Society. Other intellectual friends or writers included
Zhu Ziqing,
Feng Youlan, and
Ye Shengtao. He then went on to publish such compositions as the poem ''Winter's Night
(冬夜 Dōngyè''). Yu Pingbo graduated from Peking University in December, 1919. After graduation, Yu took a brief trip to Europe, and in 1922 spent an equally brief period in the United States, but found neither place attractive. ==Career during Republican China==