Calligraphy mid-autumn sticker

One night in the 1920s, in front of an antique shop called Pinguzhai, a man stopped and looked around. He turned and slipped into the shop, took a roll of cloth from his pocket and handed it to the shopkeeper. The shopkeeper opened it and found the Mid-Autumn Festival stickers and Yuan Bo stickers among the famous Sanxi Hall treasures in the palace.

It turned out that after the Revolution of 1911, the revolutionary army overthrew the rule of the Qing Dynasty and established the government of the Republic of China, and the last emperor Puyi was forced to abdicate. However, he and his family can still live in the Forbidden City and enjoy the annual subsidy of 3 million yuan from the government of the Republic of China. But for those royal family members who are accustomed to pampering and profligacy, the money is far from enough, so they abandoned Emperor Puyi.

Jin Fei, the former concubine of Emperor Guangxu who lived in the palace at that time, had already taken a fancy to the precious Sanxi iron of Emperor Qianlong. Sanxitie is so famous, especially the "Sanxitie in the snow" with more than 70 inscriptions of Emperor Qianlong. If it is too conspicuous, all three jobs can't be sold, and she still has to worry about it, fearing that it will cause trouble. She decided to put the Mid-Autumn Festival tie and ". In order to avoid attracting attention, I dare not go to a big antique dealer and look for a nearby antique shop, so Baotie went to the folk.

This is the text of the post. The original book is "If you don't return the Mid-Autumn Festival, it will be very difficult. How can you win the battle with He Qing and other troops?" The general idea is unknown. It is said that there are words before the word "Mid-Autumn Festival". The original post has five lines and 32 words. Later people artificially cut off two lines, and now there are only 22 words left. The general idea of the original post has never been known. There is a white eyebrow on the left side of the text. Yes, this is the masterpiece of our classmate Gan Long, who likes to remember it everywhere as a souvenir occasionally. Next to it is made in Sanxi Hall. Gan Long loved plum blossoms all his life, especially Bai Mei. Usually, we often see his poems, seals and inscriptions in rare paintings and calligraphy, but rarely see his plum blossom paintings. On the right side of the text is Gan Long's inscription and postscript. Seeing good rare treasures, this classmate still maintains his traditional style of writing poems, inscriptions and seal cutting. ...

The picture shows the inscription made by Dong Qichang, a great painter in the Ming Dynasty, enjoying this post in the West Lake Monastery. Secretarial always refers to Mi Fei, a great painter and calligrapher in the Northern Song Dynasty. The existing Mid-Autumn Post is a copy of Song, and it is suspected that it is a copy of Mi Fei. The picture on the left is still a poem written by Gan Long.

This is the full text of a poem written by Gan Long, who suddenly became happy after enjoying it.

This is the inscription of the great collectors and connoisseurs in Ming Dynasty when they collected this post. This article mainly tells an interesting story about Wang Xianzhi learning calligraphy from his father Wang Xizhi. On one occasion, Wang Xianzhi was practicing calligraphy in his study, and Wang Xizhi secretly caught a cat behind him. While Wang Xianzhi was unprepared, he took his brush, but it didn't work. So Wang Xizhi thinks this son will be famous all over the world in the future. When Wang Xianzhi got married, Wang Xizhi and her father-in-law, Yun Tan, read the marriage document together and said with a smile: The official script is well written, but it is still too young and aggressive. Wang Xizhi wrote The Theory of Music and Yi and gave it to Xian for study. Later, the official script he presented was like a phoenix dance in the middle of the month, with clear springs rippling.

This painting was made by Ding Feng Qianlong.

Finally, this post ends with Gan Long's classmate "Taihuang Shangdi Yin Bao".