Guo Lin (1823~1893), whose courtesy name was Zijia, was named Wangsansanren. A scholar and calligrapher in the late Qing Dynasty, he was born in Weixian County (now Weicheng District). Born into a declining scholarly family. He inherited his family studies at a young age and loved epigraphy. He lived in the countryside, devoted himself to archaeology, and studied six books intensively. He has been collecting gold and stones for decades, and his appreciation ability was highly praised by Chen Jieqi. He has an arrogant temperament, does not follow the popular trend, keeps himself clean, is strict with himself, and does not take any extraneous wealth. Although he was poor, he never wavered from his ambition. He was once hired by Guo Xiongfei as a teacher in his family and lived with him in the north and south for more than 10 years. After returning home, he bought more than 10 acres of land in Yangjiazhuang in the west of the city and built a house to live in, named "Yangxia Villa". Because the residence is close to the river, the room is named "Tingyu Mountain House". He lived in seclusion in the countryside, immersed himself in writing, and peeled off moss in abandoned tombs, ruined temples, and broken monuments to collect historical epigraphic documents, and obtained more than 90 species in more than 10 years. After living in the countryside, he did not enter the city for six or seven years, let alone interact with the gentry. When I was alone in researching the seals and identifying the authenticity of the tablets, I discussed it with Chen Jieqi. A total of 232 items were supplemented and compiled into 8 volumes, named "Weixian Jinshi Zhi". In his later years, he stayed with his sister. In 1883 (the ninth year of the reign of Emperor Guangxu), the minister Wang Mingluan paid a visit to Shanzuo School. He gave a detailed analysis of Xu Shen's "Shuowen Jiezi" of the Eastern Han Dynasty and put forward his own opinions. Wang Mingluan was impressed by it. Wang saw that he had written a lot, but because his family was poor and had no money to publish it, he wanted to donate money to help, but he declined. Wang also wanted to invite him and give him an official position, but he also declined. In the end, Wang Mingluan insisted on keeping the money as writing expenses and agreed to write books for the school journal, and Guo Lin only thanked him. In order to make the nearly 30 volumes of writings available as soon as possible, he spent three months and worked hard to proofread them. After Wang was dismissed from office and returned home, the book could not be published. He spent many years of hard work, but his works were buried because he was unable to publish them. He was deeply saddened and became depressed and ill. He died in 1893 (the 19th year of Guangxu) with regret. Before his death, he gave all the manuscripts to his friend Wang Chengji. He is the author of four volumes of "The First Collection of Lingfenguan Poems", ten volumes of "Second Collection", four volumes of "Three Collections", twelve volumes of "Four Collections", eight volumes of "Sequel", two volumes of "Miscellaneous Works", and "Miscellaneous Works". There are four volumes of "Continuation of Works", one volume of "Jiang Xing Diary", three volumes of "Records of Spending Summer in Qiupu", twelve volumes of "Lingfenguan Poetry Talk", six volumes of "Continuation of Poetry", as well as "Heng Meng Ci", "Floating Poems" "Mei Lou Ci" and "Repentance of Yu Qiyu" each have two volumes, etc., both of which are published in the "Biographies of Qing History".