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Comrade Wang Chengzhi, a military calligrapher, splashed ink to celebrate the traditional festival of the Chinese nation -- Chinese New Year's Eve

author:Sankei information
Comrade Wang Chengzhi, a military calligrapher, splashed ink to celebrate the traditional festival of the Chinese nation -- Chinese New Year's Eve

Military calligrapher Wang Chengzhi is a member of the Chinese Calligraphers Association. Since childhood, he has loved calligraphy, learned deeply, has a thick family tradition, takes the method from above, has an extraordinary starting point, and has a good pen. The calligraphy work "The Most Beautiful China, the Rise of a Great Power" won the "Special Invitation Gold Award" in the exhibition of calligraphy and painting works held by the Federation of Literary and Art Circles of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region in 2018 to commemorate the 21st anniversary of Hong Kong's return to the motherland and the 40th anniversary of reform and opening up. More than 600 calligraphy works have been published in more than 1,000 newspapers and media, including People's Daily, Guangming Daily, Legal Daily, China Women's Daily, Jiefangjun Daily, Shenzhou Magazine, Writers' Daily, Metro Culture Window, Chinese and Foreign Celebrity Calligraphy and Painters Daily, Chinese Culture Jinwanjia News, Veterans Magazine, Military Internal Newspaper, Global Chinese Business Daily, and official website of the state, and more than 60 inscriptions for relevant units, departments, newspapers and periodicals.

Chinese New Year's Eve, the last night of the year. The last day at the end of the year is called "year division", which means that the old year is divided here, and the new year is replaced. Division, that is, the meaning of removal; Xi refers to the night. "Chinese New Year's Eve" means the night of the end of the year, also known as the night of the big Chinese New Year's Eve, the night of Chinese New Year's Eve, the night of the year, etc., which is the last night at the end of the year. Chinese New Year's Eve is the day to remove the old and make new cloth, reunite the family, and worship ancestors, and the Qingming Festival, the half of July, and the Chongyang Festival are Chinese folk traditions to worship ancestors. Chinese New Year's Eve, it is of special significance in the hearts of the Chinese people, this most important day at the end of the year, wanderers who are far away are also in a hurry to go home to reunite with their families, and in the Chinese New Year's Eve, leave the old year, and welcome the new year.

Tang Gaoshi "Except for the Night"

[Original]

The hotel never sleeps,

What happened to the guest turned sad.

Hometown thinks a thousand miles tonight,

Another year of frost and sideburns in the Ming Dynasty.

【Translation】

I lay alone in the hotel, the cold light shining on me, and I couldn't sleep for a long time. What is it that makes my heart desolate and sad as a tourist?

People in my hometown must be thinking of me thousands of miles away tonight; My sideburns have turned gray, and tomorrow is a new year.

"New Night" is a seven-word epigram composed by Gao Shi in the Tang Dynasty, and the beginning of the poem creates a bleak and lonely artistic conception. The second sentence turns into its own straightforward and sad inner world. Write homesickness in three sentences. The last sentence "Another year of the Ming Dynasty" points to the topic of "removing the night", and the sigh of the passage of years and the shortness of life in the homesickness is even more increased. Gao Shi's poetry style is rich and majestic, but this "Except for the Night" is easy and natural, the whole poem does not have a single gorgeous word, nor does it have the scenery outside the country and the wonders of a strange city, it is all shallow colloquialism, expressing the ordinary feelings of Chinese New Year's Eve night, but it writes vividly and deeply touching the true feelings of other country wanderers.

Leave the old and welcome the new

Earth rejuvenation

Welcome to the spring

Happiness and well-being

Comrade Wang Chengzhi, a military calligrapher, splashed ink to celebrate the traditional festival of the Chinese nation -- Chinese New Year's Eve
Comrade Wang Chengzhi, a military calligrapher, splashed ink to celebrate the traditional festival of the Chinese nation -- Chinese New Year's Eve
Comrade Wang Chengzhi, a military calligrapher, splashed ink to celebrate the traditional festival of the Chinese nation -- Chinese New Year's Eve
Comrade Wang Chengzhi, a military calligrapher, splashed ink to celebrate the traditional festival of the Chinese nation -- Chinese New Year's Eve
Comrade Wang Chengzhi, a military calligrapher, splashed ink to celebrate the traditional festival of the Chinese nation -- Chinese New Year's Eve
Comrade Wang Chengzhi, a military calligrapher, splashed ink to celebrate the traditional festival of the Chinese nation -- Chinese New Year's Eve
Comrade Wang Chengzhi, a military calligrapher, splashed ink to celebrate the traditional festival of the Chinese nation -- Chinese New Year's Eve
Comrade Wang Chengzhi, a military calligrapher, splashed ink to celebrate the traditional festival of the Chinese nation -- Chinese New Year's Eve
Comrade Wang Chengzhi, a military calligrapher, splashed ink to celebrate the traditional festival of the Chinese nation -- Chinese New Year's Eve
Comrade Wang Chengzhi, a military calligrapher, splashed ink to celebrate the traditional festival of the Chinese nation -- Chinese New Year's Eve
Comrade Wang Chengzhi, a military calligrapher, splashed ink to celebrate the traditional festival of the Chinese nation -- Chinese New Year's Eve
Comrade Wang Chengzhi, a military calligrapher, splashed ink to celebrate the traditional festival of the Chinese nation -- Chinese New Year's Eve
Comrade Wang Chengzhi, a military calligrapher, splashed ink to celebrate the traditional festival of the Chinese nation -- Chinese New Year's Eve
Comrade Wang Chengzhi, a military calligrapher, splashed ink to celebrate the traditional festival of the Chinese nation -- Chinese New Year's Eve
Comrade Wang Chengzhi, a military calligrapher, splashed ink to celebrate the traditional festival of the Chinese nation -- Chinese New Year's Eve
Comrade Wang Chengzhi, a military calligrapher, splashed ink to celebrate the traditional festival of the Chinese nation -- Chinese New Year's Eve
Comrade Wang Chengzhi, a military calligrapher, splashed ink to celebrate the traditional festival of the Chinese nation -- Chinese New Year's Eve
Comrade Wang Chengzhi, a military calligrapher, splashed ink to celebrate the traditional festival of the Chinese nation -- Chinese New Year's Eve
Comrade Wang Chengzhi, a military calligrapher, splashed ink to celebrate the traditional festival of the Chinese nation -- Chinese New Year's Eve

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