Did Wang Xizhi have Spring Festival couplets at that time?

Yes Spring Festival couplets originated in Fu Tao. "Fu Tao" is a rectangular red wooden board hanging on both sides of the door in the Zhou Dynasty. In the Five Dynasties, in the court of West Shu, someone wrote couplets on peach symbols. In the Ming Dynasty, Fu Tao changed its name to "Spring Festival couplets".

There is another story: Wang Xizhi, a calligrapher in the Eastern Jin Dynasty, moved from his hometown in Shandong to Shaoxing, Zhejiang one year. At this time, it was the end of the year, and Wang Xizhi wrote a pair of Spring Festival couplets for his family to stick on both sides of the gate. Couplets are:

"Spring breeze, spring rain, spring, New Year, New Year's new scene."

Unexpectedly, because Wang Xizhi's calligraphy was the best in the world, he was highly respected by people at that time. As soon as this couplet was posted, it was uncovered at night. After the family told Wang Xizhi, Wang Xizhi didn't get angry, so he started writing and asked his family to post it again. This salary is written like this:

"Ti Ying Beixing, the southern suburb of Yanyu."

Who knows, at dawn, it was uncovered again. ...