Li Bai's poems are rich in imagination, unrestrained in style, colorful, fresh and natural in language, so they are called "poetic immortals".
Li Bai (70 1-762) was a great romantic poet in the Tang Dynasty.
2. Poet Fairy-Du Fu
His poems are closely combined with current affairs, with profound thoughts and broad realm, so people call him a "poet" and his poems are also praised.
3. The poet's magic-Bai Juyi
Bai Juyi's poetry has a wide range of themes, diverse forms and popular language, and is also known as the "king of poetry".
Bai Juyi (772-846), a native of Xinzheng, Henan Province, was a great realistic poet in the Tang Dynasty and one of the three great poets in the Tang Dynasty.
4. Poet Fairy-Su Shi
Su Shi (1037 65438+10.8-124.8), whose real name is Zi Zhan, also known as He Zhong, is a Taoist priest of tin cans and a layman of Dongpo, and is known as Su Dongpo and Su Xian in the world. Han nationality, a native of Meishan, Meizhou (now Meishan, Sichuan) and Luancheng, Hebei, was a writer, calligrapher and painter in the Northern Song Dynasty.
5, poetry crazy-He Zhangzhi
He, who is naturally free, calls himself a "fanatic of the four Ming Dynasty", and his poems are also bold and unconstrained, so he is called a "poet fanatic".
He (about 659-744) was a poet and calligrapher in the Tang Dynasty. Ji Zhen was born in Yongxing, Yuezhou (now Xiaoshan District, Hangzhou, Zhejiang) in his later years.
6. Shi Fo Wang Wei
Wang Wei is proficient in poetry, calligraphy, painting and music. He is famous for his poems, especially his five words, which praise the landscape and countryside. Together with Meng Haoran, he was called "Wang Meng" and "Shi Fo".
7. Shi Gui-Li He
His poems are good at casting words, galloping imagination, using myths and legends to create colorful images, and are known as "Shi Gui".
Li He (about 79 1 year-about 8 17), with a long word, is "the pioneer of Changji's poetry." In the Tang Dynasty, there was a man from Fuchang, Henan Province (now Yiyang County, Luoyang, Henan Province) who lived in Changgu, Fuchang, and later called Lichanggu.