Four Ancient Poems, written by Tang Dynasty poet Zhang Xu, is now in Liaoning Provincial Museum. "Four Ancient Poems" is full of vigor and vitality, unrestrained and unrestrained, with endless brushwork. If you use a cone to draw sand, there is no delicate and flashy pen. In the prosperous Tang Dynasty, the cursive genre represented by Zhang Xu was all the rage, which broke the restrained cursive style in Wei and Jin Dynasties and adopted a lyrical form of unrestrained freehand brushwork. As Han Yu, a writer in the Tang Dynasty, said in "Preface to Send Master Gao Xian": "Zhang Xushan's cursive script, if you don't wait for his skills, you will be embarrassed, sad, resentful, homesick, drunk, upset and tempted, you must send it from the cursive script.
The first moon post is the work of Wang Xizhi in the Eastern Jin Dynasty. Ink is imitation of the Tang Dynasty, cursive, 8 lines, 6 1 word. "Long live the Tian Tong Post", the second article in the series. Calligraphy style is sloppy, natural and naive, straightforward, and has the breath of Jin people.