The pioneer of vernacular poetry school in Tang Dynasty

Wang Fanzhi, a poet and monk in the early Tang Dynasty, is also known as the pioneer of the vernacular poetry school in the Tang Dynasty. He was born in Liyang, Weizhou (now Xunxian County, Henan Province).

Wang Fanzhi's poetry is unique, and it is more of a satire on the real society, the world and human feelings. His poetic style is closely related to his personal living environment and experience. If you want to know more about Wang Fanzhi, you can look at the introduction of the poet in the article "The most special Tang poetry, full of vernacular, writing the highest realm of snobbery".

Wang Fanzhi's poems have always been regarded as "Xialiba people" by feudal orthodoxy because of their straightforward writing style.

Wang Fanzhi's poems have no title. Both of them use the first person, and both of them slightly exaggerate some common problems in the behavior and psychology of this world, which makes people laugh and laugh, and then they can feel and reflect.

The poet no longer preaches boring concepts, but picks up the materials in life and shows them with vivid behaviors and characters, making his reasoning more vivid and intriguing. If you want to convince a person, you can learn from Wang Fanzhi's educational methods.

The Bible says, "If someone hits you on the right cheek, turn your left cheek to him." If someone wants to sue you, he should take your inner coat and outer coat. If someone forces you to walk a mile, you can walk two miles with him. "This is not to appease and tolerate the wicked, but to say that if a person does evil, he has a just law made by God to judge him, not ourselves.

The Bible says, "Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God." People suffer because they have "delusion", and "delusion" means "persistence". If you want to get rid of pain, you need to let go of "persistence" and purify your heart.