Verses about hard practice in calligraphy

1. What are the poems about the results of calligraphy practice?

1. Song Wangzhu's "Poem of the Prodigy"

I have high ambitions, so don't carry a sword, I am a pen knife. .

2. "Twenty Rhymes to Li Taibai" by Du Fu of the Tang Dynasty

The pen fell in the storm, and the poem became a weeping poem for ghosts and gods.

3. "Ode to Xuanzhou Bi" by Geng Mao of the Tang Dynasty

The wind blew up when the paper fell, shaking the sky and seeing thick dew.

4. "Continued Burning of Books" by Li Zhi of the Ming Dynasty

He was too lazy to write books all his life, but he soon finished them.

5. "In the Mountain" by Shao Ding of the Song Dynasty

There is nothing wrong with his brows, but his writings last for thousands of years.

A short story about calligraphy practice: When Wang Xizhi was young, he practiced calligraphy very hard. It is said that the broken brushes he used to practice calligraphy were piled together to form a hill. People called it "Brush Mountain". There was a small pool next to his house, and he often washed his brushes and inkstones in this pool. Later, the water in the small pool turned black, and people called this pool the "ink pool." When he grew up, Wang Xizhi's calligraphy was quite good, and he still insisted on practicing calligraphy every day. One day, he was so focused on practicing calligraphy in his study that he even forgot to eat. The maid brought his favorite mashed garlic and steamed buns and urged him to eat them, but he seemed not to hear and kept immersed in writing. The maid had no choice but to tell his wife. When the wife and the maid came to the study, they saw Wang Xizhi holding a steamed bun stained with ink and putting it into his mouth, making his mouth black. They couldn't help laughing. It turned out that when Wang Xizhi was practicing calligraphy while eating, he still looked at the calligraphy and mistakenly dipped the ink into minced garlic. The lady said to Wang Xizhi distressedly: "You have to take care of yourself! Your handwriting is very good, why do you have to practice so hard?" Xizhi raised his head and replied: "Although my handwriting is good, but that They all learn from the writing methods of their predecessors. If I want to have my own writing method, I have to work hard." 2. Which idiom is about Wang Xizhi's diligent study and practice of calligraphy?

It's so profound.

rù mù sān fēn

Explanation According to legend, Wang Xizhi was writing on a wooden board. When the carpenter was carving, he found that the writing penetrated three-thirds of the way into the board. The calligraphy is described as extremely powerful. The problem of multi-metaphor analysis is very profound.

Source from Tang Dynasty Zhang Huaiguan's "Book Breaks·Wang Xizhi": "Wang Xizhi's calligraphy edition was cut by workers, and the pen penetrated into the wood three-thirds."

The structure is more formal.

Usage is used as a compliment. A word used to praise others or make profound comments. Generally used as predicate, attributive, adverbial and complement.

The correct pronunciation is three; it cannot be read as "shān".

Distinguish the form; cannot write "人".

Synonyms are powerful enough to see through the back of paper, iron is painted on silver hooks

Antonyms are slightly visible

Examples Some of Lu Xun's essays ~ reveal the ugly face of the Kuomintang reactionaries.