"Wang Duo's Cursive Script Presents a Scroll of Poems to Zhang Bao" was written by Wang Duo, a master of calligraphy in the Ming and Qing Dynasties. The whole picture is in good condition and circulated in an orderly manner. The original is now in the Tokyo National Museum, Japan. The carrier of the Dharma sticker is damask. Cursive writing. There are many photocopied works of original origin published in mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan, and they can be found in various Wang Duo calligraphy stickers, appreciation stickers, copying practice textbooks, etc., and there are countless others.
There are seventy-five lines (columns) in "Wang Duo's Cursive Script Presented to Zhang Baoyi". According to the cursive script, the number of words in each line (column) varies. The shape of the characters may be condensed or vertical, and the structure may be tight. The time is slow and the shapes are different in size. There are 336 Chinese characters in Volume 1 of Ji Shi.
The "Wang Duo's Cursive Script Presents a Poem Scroll to Zhang Baoyi" is approximately 469 cm in width and 26 cm in height. It is a long banner scroll (note: depending on its size, it can be called a horizontal scroll or a hand scroll).