So far, there are only two so many known as the "History of Poetry", one is the famous Tang Dynasty poet Du Fu, and the other is the Song Dynasty poet Wang Yuanliang.
Wang Yuanliang (1241-1317), also known as Shuiyunzi, Chu Fan, jiangnan tired. A native of Qiantang (present-day Hangzhou, Zhejiang). Poet, lyricist, and court violinist of the late Song and early Yuan dynasties.
During the reign of Emperor Duzong of Song, he enshrined the inner court with the Xiaoyin Rhythm and the Good Drum And Qin. In the second year of The Reign of Emperor Gongzong of Song, Lin'an fell, and Wang Yuanliang moved with the Three Palaces to Dadu, entered and exited the palace, served the Yuan Lord, and once visited Wen Tianxiang in prison. In the 25th year of the Yuan Dynasty, he became a Taoist monk, was allowed to return to the south, and arrived in Qiantang the following year. Later, it traveled to and from Jiangxi, Hubei, Sichuan and other places, and finally the old lake and mountain.

Wang Yuanliang's poems mostly recorded the events before and after the fall of the Song Dynasty, and people at that time compared him to Du Fu, and his poems also had the title of "History of Poetry".
Zhu Jun admired the poet Wang Yuanliang's two poems "Drunken Song":
Random points to raise and kill six more winds blowing the court to burn out the ming
Attendant Strikes Yuan Table Concubine Signature Xie Daoqing*
* Xie Daoqing: Empress Dowager of Emperor Gong of Song.
General Lü * in Xiangyang Xiangyang ten years of iron backbone
Hope to break the reinforcements without news, scolding and killing Jia Pingzhang*
* General Lü: Refers to the defending general Lü Wenhuan.
* Jia Pingzhang: Refers to the traitor Jia Xiangdao.
Zhu Jun then admired Wang Yuanliang's poem "Huzhou Song And Six", which expressed Wang Poet's longing for his hometown.
Looking north at the swallow clouds without end, the river goes east to the water leisurely
Sunset outside the jackdaws, eyes cut off the southeast four hundred states*
* Four Hundred Prefectures: Guide to the administrative units at the prefectural, state, and county levels under the Song Dynasty. In the heyday of the Song Dynasty, it was called "Eight Hundred Prefectures", and half of the Southern Song Dynasty was about half of the country, so the author called it "Four Hundred Prefectures".