What is the fate of the four great talents in Jiangnan?

Tang Yin, a native of Suzhou in the Ming Dynasty, was born into a merchant family. His father was Tang Guangde and his mother was Qiu. He has been smart since childhood. When he was more than 20 years old, his family suffered a series of misfortunes. His parents, wife, and sister died one after another, and his family declined. Under the advice of his friend Zhu Yunming, he concentrated on studying. At the age of 29, he participated in the Yingtianfu public examination and won the first place "Jie Yuan". At the age of 30, he went to He passed the Beijing Examination, but was implicated in a fraud case and was denounced as an official. After that, he decided not to make progress and made a living by selling paintings. In the ninth year of Zhengde (1514), he went to Nanchang for more than half a year at the invitation of King Ning Zhu Chenhao. Later, he realized that King Ning had evil intentions, so he pretended to be crazy and even ran naked on the street to escape. Life was difficult in his later years, and he died of illness at the age of 54. Zhu Zhishan brought together the strengths of various calligraphers and led a generation of calligraphers. He was one of the "three masters of calligraphy in the mid-Ming Dynasty" of the Wu School. His calligraphy draws on the calligraphy of Yu Shinan of the Tang Dynasty and Zhao Mengfu of the Yuan Dynasty, the running script of Wang Xizhi and Wang Xianzhi of the Jin Dynasty, and the cursive script of Tang Huaisu. "Tang Bohu's paintings are Zhu Zhishan's calligraphy". Zhu Zhishan's "Poetry Volume in Six-Style Script", "Poetry Volume of Du Fu in Cursive Script", "Nineteen Ancient Poems", "Poetry Volume of Tang Dynasty in Cursive Script" and "Poem and Han Volume in Cursive Script" are all masterpieces of ink that have been handed down from generation to generation. Although Zhu Yunming is unknown, he can still paint, but he rarely paints and has even fewer works that have been handed down from generation to generation. He died in the fifth year of Jiajing (1526) at the age of 67. After Zhu Zhishan's death, he was buried in the Zhu family's ancestral grave in Hengshan, a suburb of Suzhou. However, the tomb has been leveled due to the vicissitudes of life. Wen Zhengming was born in a family of officials, and his early career was not smooth. During the Ming and Qing Dynasties, those who passed examinations at all levels and were admitted to prefecture, state, or county schools were generally called "shengyuan", also known as "scholars." When Wen Zhengming took the examination for the first year of Jiajing (1522), when he was fifty-three years old, he failed to pass the examination and his head turned gray. At the age of fifty-four, he was recommended by Li Chongsi, the minister of the Ministry of Industry, to the imperial court in the capital. After an examination by the Ministry of Personnel, he was awarded a low-paying post in the Hanlin Academy awaiting imperial edict. At this time, his calligraphy and painting had become famous, and there were many requests for his calligraphy and painting. As a result, he was jealous and excluded by his colleagues in the Hanlin Academy. Wen Zhengming felt unhappy. In the second year after arriving in Beijing, he wrote a letter asking to resign and go home. Within three years, He submitted three resignation reports before he was approved. At the age of fifty-seven, he resigned and left Beijing, sailed south, and returned to Suzhou to settle down. From then on, he devoted himself to poetry, calligraphy and painting, no longer seeking official career, and retired to play and calligraphy. In his later years, he had an outstanding reputation and was known as "whose writing style is popular all over the world". Those who bought his calligraphy and paintings broke the barrier and said that he was "admired by the sea and the mountains." When he was nearly ninety years old, he still worked tirelessly to write epitaphs for people. Before he could finish writing, he "put down his pen and sat down and passed away." In his later period, Xu Zhenqing believed in Taoism and studied health preservation. He died in the capital in the sixth year of Zhengde in the Ming Dynasty (1511) at the age of 33. His tomb is at the northern end of Yujiabang at the Wandian Bridge at the western foot of Huqiu Mountain. Xu Huiqing's other works include Di Gong Ji, Jian Sheng Ye Wen, Yi Lin, etc.