Poetry Volume of Jingfubo Temple, paper and ink, 30.4 cm long and 820.6 cm wide, running script, 46 lines, 17 1 word, written by Huang Tingjian in May of Northern Song Dynasty (11kloc-0/). It is now in Yongqing Library, Hosokawa Morihiro, Tokyo.
Poems of Jingfubo Temple was written by Huang Tingjian at the age of 57, which is his masterpiece in his later years. In Song Dynasty, Zhang Xiaoxiang wrote a postscript to this volume "I believe in a generation of strange pens". In Song Dynasty, Fan Chengda wrote a postscript: "In my later years, calligraphy in the valley was flourishing, so this post has no complaints.
Heart and hand are in harmony, and pen and ink are as one wishes. In the Ming Dynasty, Wen Zhiming wrote the postscript: "The Fubo Temple poem written by Liu Bin, the official book of the Right Huang man Festival, is magnificent, and it is really strange."
The Artistic Features of Calligraphy in Huang Tingjian's Poems of Jingfubo Temple;
Liu Yuxi's poems in The Poems of Jingfubo Temple were written by a man named Shi Mingzhu. This person is related to the daughter-in-law of the valley (the daughter of Shi Xindu). He once borrowed a boat to help the younger brother of the valley, Sizhi (Uncle Xiang, the third son of Uncle Huang Lian), so he came to the valley to ask for books.
Although Huang Tingjian said in the postscript that "there are too many books, too many papers and too few fingers to write", it is a polite and modest speech. Below, "if you stick to Huainan and see the old, you can show it." How can I get a straight book from Huang Lu? " This is a high praise from the old man in the valley.