This sentence comes from "Hundred Rhymes of Caoji", which is an important cursive script in ancient China and an important way to learn cursive script. The author is signed by Wang Xizhi.
This sentence helps to remember the cursive structure in the form of songs, that is, it helps to remember the cursive structure of drunkenness, fragmentation, beauty and piano.
Version of Song of Grass Rhyme
The ancestor of "Song of Grass with Hundred Rhymes" is unknown today, but the most famous one is Cai Zhenzi in the Northern Song Dynasty. He cut down the cursive script circulating in the market at that time and turned it into a cursive script with a hundred rhymes, but his book is no longer circulating.
(See Volume 5 of Chen Zhu's Guang Ji. ) The earliest published version of cursive script is Baiyun Cursive Script, which was engraved in the Yuan Dynasty. The book has 76 rhymes and 760 words, but the engraving is not precise, the scanned version is not subtle, and the broken and stained parts are also common. Hong kong journal of genealogy, issue 265438 +0 to issue 29.
In Wanli 12, Zhu Yijun, Ming Shenzong collected and engraved three books about Cao Ji. The one with more words and complete content is called Cao Yun Ge (* *106 rhyme 1060 words), and the one with thinner content is called Cao Mo Yun Ge (* * *).
Later, in the twenty years of the Wanli period of the Ming Dynasty, Fan Wenlian Kui Museum put stones on it, engraved with a stone carving book named "Ji Gu Cao Ji" (published by China Bookstore in September, 199 1). In Wanli 4 1 year, I also wrote an ink book, also called Cao (Huazheng Bookstore, 1984).
There were many different versions in Ming and Qing Dynasties, such as Prairie Song (published by Shanxi Education Press in September, 1984).
Until June, 65438+April, 0992, the publishing house also published "Enlarging the Prairie Songs of Wang Xizhi" edited by Liu, Zhong Kehao and Tan Xingping. However, no matter which edition it belongs to, the signature of each book is "Wang Xizhi", and its contents are mostly repeated with the Song of Grass Tactics with traces of overlapping, addition, subtraction and modification in previous dynasties.
At present, there are two kinds of "Bai Yun Song" circulating in the market, namely ink writing and stone rubbings. The content is basically the same, and the fonts have their own characteristics. They are all five-character rhymes, which can be roughly divided into four types: 76 rhymes, 760 words, 83 rhymes, 830 words, 106 rhymes, 109 rhymes, 1090 words and so on.
This study takes Han Daoheng's Ming History and Taiwan Province Huazheng Bookstore 1984 as the temporary writing and discussion contents. Han Shu is written in ink, and his strokes are clear and beautiful. We can not only understand the cursive script and its stroke rules described in the book, but also copy Han Shu's strokes with a hard pen or a brush.