"Wen Zhiming's temporary writing of thousands of words" comes from the classical Chinese book Chronicle of the Woods, and its translation is as follows:
Wen Zhiming copied thousands of words, and practiced according to the standard of writing ten books every day, and calligraphy improved rapidly. He has never been sloppy in writing all his life. Sometimes writing back to people is a little unpleasant, so I must revise it again and again, and I won't get tired of it. Therefore, the older he gets, the more exquisite and vivid his calligraphy becomes.
a brief introduction to Wen Zhiming
Wen Zhiming (November 28th, 147-March 28th, 1559), formerly known as Bi (or Zuobi), had a clear character, and since the age of forty-two, he has been using the word line, and the word is even more pronounced. Because the ancestors were Hengshan people, they were named Hengshan lay, and the world called "Wenhengshan". People from Changzhou County (now Suzhou, Jiangsu Province), Suzhou Prefecture, South Zhili. Painters, calligraphers, writers and collectors in Ming Dynasty. Han nationality, from Changzhou (now Suzhou, Jiangsu).
Born in Chenghua of Emperor Xuanzong of the Ming Dynasty for six years, he died in Jiajing of Emperor Shizong of the Ming Dynasty for thirty-eight years, at the age of ninety, and served as an official in Hanlin. Bai Juyi and Su Shi, poets, were educated in Wu Kuan, studied books in Li Yingzhen and studied painting in Shen Zhou. In poetry and prose, he is also called "Four Talents in Wuzhong" with Zhu Yunming, Tang Yin and Xu Zhenqing. In the history of painting, Shen Zhou, Tang Yin and Chou Ying are called "the four schools of Wu".