representatives of the uninhibited school: Su Shi, Xin Qiji, Zhang Yuangan, Zhang Xiaoxiang, Yue Fei, etc.
1. Su Shi: Su Shi (January 8, 137—August 24, 111) was born in Luancheng, Hebei Province, a writer, calligrapher and gourmet in the Northern Song Dynasty.
2. Xin Qiji: Xin Qiji (May 28, 114—October 3, 127), whose original name was Tanfu, later changed to Youan, later nicknamed Jiaxuan in middle age, was born in Licheng County, Jinan, Shandong Province (now Zhacun, four winds, yaoqiang town, Licheng District, Jinan City, Shandong Province). Officials, generals, writers and uninhibited poets in the Southern Song Dynasty are known as the "dragons in ci". Together with Su Shi, they are called "Su Xin" and Li Qingzhao as "Jinan Er 'an".
3. Zhang Yuangan: Zhang Yuangan (191-about 1161), whose name was Zhongzong, was a Luchuan layman and a native of Zhenyinshan. In his later years, he called himself Luchuan Laoyin. Yongfu, Luchuan (now Yuezhou Village, Songkou Town, Yongtai, Fujian). He has served as a student in Imperial College and a county magistrate in Chenliu. Nomads from the border, Qin Gui when the country, into the Li Gang, resolutely resist gold, strongly remonstrate to his death.
Li Gang was given the poem "He Xinlang". After Qin Gui heard about it, he went to Dali Temple to get rid of his name and cut his books. Yuan Gan then roamed Jiangsu, Zhejiang and other places, died in other places, and died at the age of about 7, and was buried in Luoshan, Fujian. Zhang Yuangan, together with Zhang Xiaoxiang, is known as "a double gem of ci poetry" in the early Southern Song Dynasty.
4. Zhang Xiaoxiang: Zhang Xiaoxiang (1132-117), alias Anguo, was born in Hujushi, Liyang Wujiang (now wujiang town, Anhui County) and Buju Yinxian, Mingzhou (now Ningbo, Zhejiang Province). Famous poet and calligrapher in Southern Song Dynasty. The seventh grandson of Tang Dynasty poet Zhang Ji.
5. Yue Fei: Yue Fei (March 24th, 113—January 27th, 1142), born in Tangyin, Xiangzhou (now tangyin county, Henan). During the Southern Song Dynasty, the famous anti-Jin generals, militarists, strategists, national heroes, calligraphers and poets ranked first among the "Four Generals of Zhongxing" in the Southern Song Dynasty.
Extended information:
Characteristic theme
The bold school is generally characterized by a broad creative vision, a magnificent atmosphere, a love of writing words with poetic techniques and syntax, a wide range of words, and a lot of things, but sometimes it is not straight, even involving crazy shouts. After Nandu, Chen Yuyi, Ye Mengde, Zhu Dunru, Zhang Xiaoxiang, Zhang Yuan, Chen Liang, Liu Guo, etc. took the lead and became popular due to the great changes of the times and the development of the tragic and generous high-pitched tone.
The school of bold and unconstrained ci not only shocked the ci circle in the Song Dynasty, but also widely influenced the post-school of ci. From the Song Dynasty, Jin Dynasty to the Qing Dynasty, there were always poets who held bold and unconstrained flags and studied Su and Xin vigorously.
It not only describes flowers, moonlight, male huan and female love. Moreover, I prefer to take military intelligence as such a major theme into words, so that words can reflect life like poetry, the so-called "speechless, nothing can enter."
It is grand, imposing, informal, Wang Yang's wanton and straightforward, and it doesn't take the subtle and graceful music of the Lord as its function. Ci critics' comments on Su Shi's ci are "outstanding", "poetic spirit is moving forward" and "books are full of wind and waves on the sea", while Xin Qiji's comments on "generosity and arrogance" can be moved to the bold school. There are few assignments within the bold school, only three stages of fine branches: Su school, Xin school and clamor school.
Although its style is generally called bold and unconstrained, the styles of poets are also slightly different: Su Ci is clear and bold, while some bold and unconstrained ci works in the late Southern Song Dynasty are extensive, and bold and unconstrained ci writers in the Qing Dynasty, such as Chen Weisong, are also known for their boldness.
Because bold and unconstrained ci writers are fond of using allusions, pursuing simplification and discussing too much, some bold and unconstrained ci poems have some shortcomings, such as weak charm, obscure meaning, unclear image and lack of precise meter, which is also needless to say.
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