What does fairy v mean?

Yang Sheng 'an (that is, Yang Shen) and Xu Xiake, two "strangers", lived in different times, but both became attached to the Xishan Mountain in Kunming because of their love for mountains and rivers. Yang Sheng 'an is very literary and has written many famous poems about Xishan and Dianchi Lake. Later generations Xu Xiake admired Yang Gong's erudition and went to Taishi Temple to worship him. From this, he measured and inspected the landscape of Xishan with his footsteps, and all the details were recorded in Xu Xiake's Travels. In order to commemorate and cherish the memory of the two sages who became attached to the Western Hills, the "Kunming Yangsheng 'an Xuxiake Memorial Hall" was built in Yang Sheng's former residence near the Dianchi Lake, showing the legendary life of the two sages.

Kunming Yang Sheng Xuxiake Memorial Hall

Yang Shen (1488 ~ 1559), a native of Xindu, Sichuan, was the first scholar in Zheng De's sixth year (151year). In the third year of Jiajing in the Ming Dynasty (1524), he was punished by the court aides for "discussing the ceremony" and was exiled to Yongchangwei (now Baoshan) in Yunnan. After that, he lived in his old age and moved to Bijing in Xishan until his death. During his 35 years in Yunnan, Yang Sheng 'an pioneered the compilation of local chronicles, promoted the writing of books, traveled all over Yunnan, and left a large number of Mo Bao, poems, works and poems. In his later years, he visited Dianchi Lake and Xishan Mountain many times, and wrote down that "the cliffs are towering, and the green water seeks thousands of miles" to praise the majestic and steep Xishan Mountain, "Jin Fu Jin Yu Ying" to praise Dianchi Lake as ethereal as a fairy, and his wonderful sentence "The weather is always like February and March, and" bloom in Spring "won the reputation of" Spring City "for Kunming. Yang Sheng wrote more than 400 kinds of works in his life, most of which were written during his exile in Yunnan. "History of the Ming Dynasty" praised: "The knowledge of the Ming Dynasty, but the wealth of books, caution first."