From Ji Xiaolan.
"Far above the Yellow River, among the white clouds, there is an isolated city called Wanren Mountain. Why should the Qiang flute blame the willows? The spring breeze does not reach Yumen Pass." This is "Liangzhou Ci" written by Wang Zhihuan, a famous poet in the Tang Dynasty.
It is said that once, Emperor Qianlong came to Ji Xiaolan's home and saw Ji Xiaolan practicing calligraphy. He handed the paper fan to Ji Xiaolan and asked him to write a poem on it. Ji Xiaolan took the paper fan and saw distant mountains, nearby cities, willows and spring breeze on it. After some thought, he quickly wrote Wang Zhihuan's "Liangzhou Ci".
After Ji Xiaolan finished writing the poem, Qianlong picked up the paper fan and praised it greatly: "The dragon is flying and the phoenix is ??dancing, all in one breath, wonderful! How wonderful!" Qianlong looked carefully and found that the word "Jian" was missing in the poem. He was furious: "You deliberately omitted words to deceive me, what crime should you deserve!" As he said that, he threw the paper fan to Ji Xiaolan. Ji Xiaolan picked up the paper fan and took a look. Sure enough, he missed the word "Jian". He immediately said calmly: "Long live the anger! What I wrote was not Wang Zhihuan's "Liangzhou Ci", but a new one based on his words. A poem."
After that, he read aloud: "'The Yellow River is far away, and there are white clouds. There is no need to complain about the Qiang flute, and the spring breeze of the willows does not cross Yumen Pass.' Since the poem is a long and short sentence. It's called Liangzhou Ci, so it should be changed like this." Qianlong admired it and left with satisfaction.
Extended information:
Ji Yun (1724.7.26-1805.3.14), also known as Xiaolan, also known as Chunfan, his late name was Shiyun, and his Taoist name was Guanyi Taoist. A native of Lixian County (now Cangzhou City, Hebei Province). Politician and writer of the Qing Dynasty, official during the Qianlong period. He served as the censor of Zuodu, the minister of the Ministry of War and the Ministry of Rites, the co-organizer of the university, the prince and the custodian of the imperial family, and the supervisor of the imperial family. He once served as the chief compiler of the "Sikuquanshu".
Ji Yun studied Han Confucianism, read a lot of books, worked in poetry and parallel prose, and was especially good at textual research and exegesis. He has been an official for more than 50 years. He was talented and energetic when he was young, but his inner world became increasingly closed in his later years. His "Notes on Yuewei Thatched Cottage" is the product of this state of mind. His poems and essays were collected by later generations and compiled into "Ji Wenda Gong's Collection".
In February of the 10th year of Jiaqing (AD 1805), Ji Yun died of illness. Because he was "smart and eager to learn, he could write essays, and he was able to teach him everything in politics" (an inscription given by Emperor Jiaqing), so he was given a posthumous title. His name was Wenda, and he was known as Wenda Gong in his hometown.
Reference link: Baidu Encyclopedia-Ji Xiaolan