Cursive script: a style of Chinese characters characterized by simple structure and continuous strokes. It was formed in the Han Dynasty and evolved on the basis of official script used for simple writing. It can be divided into Cao Zhang, Modern Grass and Crazy Grass. The brushwork has also become rule-based, such as the Songjiang version of the Three Kingdoms Wu Jizhang. Modern grass is eclectic and fluent, such as the first month written by Wang Xizhi in Jin Dynasty. It has become an artistic creation completely divorced from practicality. Since then, cursive script has only been calligraphers' imitation of Cao Zhang, Cao Jin and Crazy Grass. The representative works of locoweed, such as Abdominal Pain by Zhang Xu in Tang Dynasty and Autobiographical Post by Huai Su, are all existing treasures.
Grass writes about self-ignorance.
Zhang, the prime minister, has always been good at cursive writing, but it has not worked. At that time, people all over the world laughed at it. The prime minister is very relieved. One day, he got a sentence and asked for a pen. The paper was full of dragons and snakes for his nephew to record. When the waves were in danger, his nephew turned a blind eye and asked, "What's the point?" The prime minister knew it long ago, but he didn't know it himself. He scolded his nephew and said, "If Hu hadn't asked earlier, I would have forgotten."