Who is a vegetarian in Zhangdian?

As follows:

When Huai Su lived in Lingling, he was poor and had no paper to write on. He planted more than 10,000 plantains and spread them with banana leaves, so he called them "blue sky". Lack of books is to draw a plate of books and a board, and the books are repeatedly worn out.

"No paper to write", Huai Su is really poor and has no money to buy paper. However, Huai Su has an idea: "More than 10,000 plantains are planted, and the leaves of plantains are scattered." Huai Su is good at adjusting measures to local conditions, and has planted more than 10,000 plantain trees in a wasteland near the temple. When the plantain grew up, he picked its leaves and spread them on the table, using the ash and water under the iron pot as ink. How free he is!

Huai Su is an optimist by nature. How can he see it? "The reason why it is called" blue sky "is because the residence is full of banana forests, so it is called" blue sky ",which is very interesting. This "naming" should be understood as "naming, naming".

Huai Su tried his best to make his own body double: draw a book, draw a board and repeat the book. I found a wooden plate and a square plate and painted them with white paint, so I wrote, wiped and used them repeatedly.

Who is "Zhangdian vegetarian"?

The answers are Zhang Xu and Huai Su, calligraphers of the Tang Dynasty. Huai Su's cursive script is called "Crazy Grass", which is round and powerful with a pen, making it like a circle, unrestrained and smooth, just like Zhang Xu. Huai Su is the leader of a generation of coquettish cursive script in the history of calligraphy.

Huai Su's autobiography is his masterpiece. Comments on famous sentences: "The color of ink paper is wonderful and moving, and the vertical and horizontal changes occur at the ends of hair, which is mysterious." Huai Su, a native of Changsha, Hunan Province, became a monk at the age of ten. When he was young, he loved calligraphy in his spare time after meditation.