The representative works of the four masters in the early Tang Dynasty?

"Four outstanding writers in the early Tang Dynasty" is a general term for four writers in China in the early Tang Dynasty, including Yang Jiong, Lu and Luo, or "Wang Luo" for short. "Biography of Yang Jiong in Old Tang Dynasty" said: "Yang Jiong is as famous as Lu and Lu, and is also known as Luo, the king of the sea, also known as the four outstanding men.

Wang Bo's poems (about 650-676) can break through the shackles of palace poems in the literary world at that time, and the style is fresh and clear. Farewell to Du DuDu is a famous work, which has swept away the inferiority and pain of people's farewell in the past and has been told by people all the time. He is also good at parallel prose, and his masterpiece Preface to Wang Tengting has become a household name in the Tang Dynasty. Yi Fu's academic works, except Preface to the Eighty-one Difficult Classics of the Yellow Emperor and Taimi Zan, are all lost in Wenyuan Huaying. In the poetic genre, he is good at five laws and five sentences. His representative works include Farewell to Du DuDu's appointment in Shu. His main literary achievement is parallel prose, which is abundant and of good quality. His representative works include Preface to Wang Tengting and so on.

Yang Jiong (650-693? Poetry is good at five laws, especially poems describing frontier life, such as "The Battle of the South of the City" and "Joining the Army", which are magnificent and powerful in style. Other disciplines have not been able to get rid of the glamorous style of writing. There are 50 essays, including many poems, prefaces, tables and records. In the preface of Wang Bo's Collected Works, Wang Bo's theory and practice of reforming the immoral atmosphere at that time were highly praised. Among the "Four Masters", his poems are the least and his achievements are slightly smaller. Yang Jiong is good at five-character poems, and his masterpieces include The Frontier, Purple Horse, Fighting in the South and Seeing Zhao Zong at Night, among which Joining the Army is his masterpiece.

Lu (later about 636-695) wrote five sad essays. There is a poem title, and its poem is better in seven-character style. The works are rich in color, broad in content and clear in artistic conception, and win by rhyme. The representative work "The Ancient Meaning of Chang 'an" reveals the extravagant life and internal struggle of the upper class, and made outstanding achievements in the long songs in the early Tang Dynasty. His representative works include Lu Sheng Ji and Worry Ji.

The representative work of the king (about 626-684), Dijing Pian, is similar to Lu's Ancient Meaning of Chang 'an, but it is longer and worse arranged, so it was called a swan song at that time. He is also good at five-character poems. The Five Laws "A Political Prisoner Listening to Cicada" and "Li Shichuan" (that is, "Prose of Seeking Wuhou"). His masterpieces include Goose Fu and Kung Fu Tan.