This can be said to reflect the innovative style of Li Yong's calligraphy and the huge impact it had at the time. Li Yong's calligraphy is mainly based on tablets. Gao Sisun's "Wei Lue" records that he wrote as many as eight hundred tablets. Moreover, almost all of the stele tablets he wrote were written by himself, and there are even claims that he engraved them himself (see He Liangjun's "Si You Zhai Shu Lun"). Du Fu has a poem that goes: "Recalling the past, Li Gongcun, the Ci Lin has a foundation. The sound is strong and the pen is scattered, and the rich and clear system is scattered. The wind scatters gold and stone, chasing the sharp mountains and mountains. The love is poor, and the principles of nature are learned, and the world of heaven and human beings is learned. Qian Ye walks through his door. "The tablet is based on the four descendants. The fame is deep and I hope to return it." ("Eight Sad Poems: Presented to Secretary Jiangxia Li Gongyong") Du Fu and Li Yong were contemporaries, and his poems are by no means overly praised.