Appreciation of screen translation of cursive script

Cursive screen [Tang Dynasty] Huai Su can clearly see where there is a screen in the Han Dynasty. Although it is covered with dust, there is still thick ink on it. Strange rocks rush to the autumn stream, and Han Teng Gu Hangge. Close to the water tower, you get the moon first, and every word is good.

Where did you get this screen? There are obvious traces of Huai Su's calligraphy on it. Although there is a lot of dust and color pollution, you can still see thick ink. The written words are like strange stones rushing to the mountain stream in autumn, and the vertical hook strokes of the words are like the cold withered Gu Teng hanging upside down under Gu Song. If you put the screen by the water, I'm afraid every word will turn into a dragon and swim into the water.

A "screen" is a device for indoor wind protection or as a barrier. For aesthetic design, it is generally painted with pictures or written with words, so it is still of artistic value in painting and calligraphy. This poem seems to chant "screen", but in fact it is Huai Su's cursive script on "screen". It "profoundly depicts the flying momentum, vigorous image and endless vitality of Huai Su's cursive script through vivid and incisive language forms. It is one of the famous works in the Tang Dynasty "(Hong Pimo's Selected Reading).

Huai Su was born in Changsha, Hunan Province. Originally surnamed Qian, he became a monk in his early years. The year of birth and death cannot be verified, and the activity time should be in the eighth century, that is, in the middle of the Tang Dynasty. He studied under Zhang Xu, Yan Zhenqing and other famous calligraphers, and was diligent and eager to learn. Later, he became famous for "Wild Grass" and became a master, just like a shower. His cursive script was famous for a while, and later, his book traces were even more cherished. Although a piece of paper is a word, it is also valuable. The ink left by him includes autobiographical notes, bitter bamboo shoots notes, fish eating notes, thousands of words, etc., all of which are cursive and have photocopies handed down from generation to generation.