Word set style
Reading "Flower Collection" and "Honor Collection" reminds people of Xu Ling's "New Ode to Yutai". Reading Poems in Caotang reminds people of Ma Wei's "only mobilization". Reading Zhu Zhu An's Comprehensive Poems and Dong Ziyuan's Selected Poems reminds people of Shen Deqian's Three Generations of Poems.
The New Yutai Fu compiled by Xu Ling in the Southern Dynasties contains the court poems from the pre-Qin Dynasty to the Southern Dynasties. It is a classic collection of poems after The Book of Songs and Songs of the South. A large number of poems from the Han, Wei and Six Dynasties have been preserved, such as Poems for Ancient Poetry, Stories Collected on the Mountain, Mulberry on the Stranger, Yu, Walking in the Southeast Corner of Sunrise, Snow on the Mountain, Song, etc., all of which come from this collection, and the poems are full of amorous feelings.
Huajian Collection is a collection of words edited by Zhao Chongzuo, a post-Shu person, which includes the works of 18 poets from the late Tang Dynasty to the Five Dynasties. Wen is the ancestor of Huajian School. They deliberately imitated the gorgeous ci style of Wen and formed Huajian School. The songs in Zun Qian Ji are all for banquets. There are 260 poems written by 36 writers in Tang and Five Dynasties, and the editors are anonymous.
Huajianji, Zun and Yu Tai Xin Yong are similar in style, and Wang Guowei can associate them together.
Cai Zhuan Yuan is a 10-volume collection of poems compiled by Shu after the Five Dynasties. His poetic style: "the rhyme is high and glorious, the words are beautiful and the spring scenery is beautiful."
Poems in Caotang is a collection of poems edited by He Shixin in Southern Song Dynasty. Most of the poems are Song poetry, with a few pronouns of Tang and Wu, and the poetic style is full of emotion.
Wang Guowei linked these two works with similar styles.
The first twenty-six volumes of Ci Comprehensive were compiled by Zhu Yizun, and the last ten volumes were supplemented by contemporary Wilson. * * * There are more than 600 words selected from Tang Dynasty, Five Dynasties, Song Dynasty, Jin Dynasty and Yuan Dynasty, and 2253 words are included in * * *. Advocate elegant ci style, not too hard language and new cavity.
Xuan Ci was compiled by Zhang Huiyan in Qing Dynasty. Zhang Huiyan (176 1- 1802) was born in Wujin, Jiangsu (now Changzhou). When selecting and recording, Zhang Huiyan thought that "you are a good girl, but you don't know the door" and was strict with the selected works. He emphasized that Ci should be placed on a better footing, and paid attention to the practical significance of the content of Ci, demanding that the status of Ci should be "similar to poetry and fu", and chose the Ci of Su Shi, Qin Guan, Zhou Bangyan, Xin Qiji, Wang et al. After Zhang Huiyan's death, his grandson Dong Yi continued to edit these poems. The style of the selected poems is different from that of the selected poems, which requires the works to be "mellow and elegant". Compared with Selected Poems, it is closer to comprehensive poetry. Wang Guowei's classification should be continued words and comprehensive words.
Shen Deqian, a poet in Qing Dynasty, has a clear pronunciation and mellow voice, a foolish name and an absurd writing style, and emphasizes that poetry serves feudal politics. In "Talking about Poetry", he said clearly at the beginning: "Poetry is the Tao, can reason, can care about things, can feel ghosts and gods, can establish a country and teach, and can deal with princes, so it is so important." At the same time, it advocates "gentle and honest, the ultimate rule" and advocates the Confucian tradition of "poetry teaching". He pays attention to the "style" of words, and his poetic theory is called "metrical theory". He edited and selected poems of three dynasties, namely, Tang poetry, Ming poetry and Qing poetry.
Comprehensive Ci, Selected Ci and Selected Poems of Three Dynasties all have the theory of "elegance", which is more the aesthetic standard of Confucian utilitarianism. Wang Guowei linked them together.