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Calligraphic inscription of the early Qing dynasty essayist Wang Wan

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Wang Wan (1624-1691), zi yuanwen, no. blunt an, no. first no. yusha mountain tree, late no. Yao Feng, small character liquid immortal. A native of Changzhou (present-day Suzhou, Jiangsu), he was an official scholar and essayist in the early Qing Dynasty, and together with Hou Fangyu and Wei Xi, he was collectively known as the "Three Greats" of prose in the late Ming and early Qing dynasties. In the twelfth year of Shunzhi (1655), he entered the priesthood, and the chief of the official household department, the chief of the punishment department, and in his later years, he lived in seclusion in Yaofeng Mountain in Taihu Lake, wrote a story behind closed doors, and did not ask about the world, and the scholar called "Mr. Yaofeng". There are "Yao Feng Poetry Notes", "Blunt Weng Before and After The Class Draft, Continuation Draft".

Calligraphic inscription of the early Qing dynasty essayist Wang Wan

Wang Wan's calligraphy inscription Qian Xuan Xiao Yi Zhi Earn Lan Ting Prologue Scroll, Collected by the Freer Museum of Art, USA.

Calligraphic inscription of the early Qing dynasty essayist Wang Wan
Calligraphic inscription of the early Qing dynasty essayist Wang Wan
Calligraphic inscription of the early Qing dynasty essayist Wang Wan
Calligraphic inscription of the early Qing dynasty essayist Wang Wan
Calligraphic inscription of the early Qing dynasty essayist Wang Wan

Old Blunt re-recorded in the shadow tower of the Mountain Light Tower of Qiunan, when he was sixty and seven.