How about Yong Zhengdi's calligraphy?

A netizen in the post bar answered very well: Yongzheng calligraphy is elegant and vigorous: Yong Zhengdi was in power for only 13 years, so there are few calligraphy works and calligraphy comments handed down before he ascended the throne, which need to be developed. Yongzheng was an emperor who was good at speculation and severely punished corrupt officials. There is a passage in the Chronicle of Shu Lin, which does not mention how Yongzheng's calligraphy is or the evaluation of the scholar's calligraphy, but indirectly shows that "seeing a scholar is quite proficient in the eight methods" and has already possessed the quality of the eight methods and the ability to evaluate calligraphy. Yongzheng's reign time is much less than Kangxi Qianlong's, and the preserved calligraphy works are obviously less than Kangxi Qianlong's, which is very precious. After becoming an emperor, his calligraphy experienced a long initial study and imitation, and entered a mature stage. Calligraphy as a whole is fluent, skillful, generous, natural, elegant and vigorous, with extraordinary style, and the style in which emperors overwhelm the strong.