Jiang Xu, Tian Yanhe and Situwei celebrate their birthdays. Both of them are English disciples and are good at grass. Birthday book is the best word. Zhong You, people, good regular script, and treasures of the Han and Wei palaces are all handwritten. Wei Mingdi started from Ling Yuntai, and nailed the list first by mistake without asking a question. Take a cage for your birthday, and the pulley length b leads it, so it will be on the list. The list is twenty-five feet off the ground, and the birthday is very dangerous. I threw my pen down and burned it. Or advise children and grandchildren, never use this method, write a family order. I became an official at a young age. It is also said that there are few seasons when children are born.
At the end of the Han Dynasty, Zhao Yi mocked Zhang Zhi's disciple Jiang Xu? Meng Ying and Liang Xuan? Kunda cursive script "does not think about simplicity" and "is difficult but late". Starting from the traditional Confucian concept, Zhao Yi thought that the popular cursive script at that time was an "end-of-life thing" that had nothing to do with the world and the country, and "covered the ears of the essence". Because "townships don't use this as a better ability, courts don't use this as collectors, doctors don't use this as a test, and four departments don't use this as a compilation. Recruitment does not ask this, and performance appraisal does not teach this word. The word' charity' does not reach politics, and grass does not harm governance. " But this thought can't stop the natural development of cursive art.
A brief introduction to cursive script-another name is Qiu Shu. Broadly speaking, it refers to people who scribble regardless of age, font and writing style; In a narrow sense, it refers to a font with continuous strokes and convenient writing. Xu Shen in the Eastern Han Dynasty said in the Preface of Explaining Words that "there are cursive scripts in Han Dynasty". The popular calligraphy in the early Han Dynasty was cursive script (that is, scribbled official script). Later, it gradually developed into "Cao Zhang". By the end of the Han Dynasty, it was said that Zhang Zhi's "Cao Zhang" contained traces of no connection between the strokes and characters of official script, which became a "modern cursive script" with continuous and convenient strokes, and was later called cursive script. It was perfected by Wang Xizhi of the Eastern Jin Dynasty. In the middle Tang Dynasty, Zhang Xu and Huai Su wrote "Today Grass" in a more indulgent and bizarre way, calling it "Crazy Grass" to distinguish it from "Today Grass".
Weeds are also called "big grass". One of the most indulgent cursive scripts. Get rid of Wang Xizhi's gentle cursive style all the way in the Eastern Jin Dynasty. His brushwork is continuous, rushing, and the font is changeable, which is very dance of dragons and snakes. Named after Zhang Xu and Huai Su in the Tang Dynasty. Zhang Xu's four poems handed down from ancient times and Huai Su's self-narrative posts are the representatives.