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Which is the man who dipped his buns in ink and ate them?

Wang Xizhi

Wang Xizhi was so oblivious to the study of calligraphy that he became the envy of others "son-in-law". Wang Xizhi's uncle, Wang Guan, was a close friend of the same dynasty, and he intended to select one of Wang's disciples to be his daughter's son-in-law, who was both talented and beautiful. When Rare's butler came to the Wang family to look at the Wang disciples, they all looked a bit nervous because they all wanted to be Rare's son-in-law.

Only Wang Xizhi in the east wing remained calmly lying on his bed, oblivious to his thoughts about calligraphy. The butler of the Rare Family told Rare Ghan about this, and Rare Ghan thought that this man was the Wang Xizhi, who had excellent calligraphy that contained nothing, and so he married his beloved daughter to him.

Wang Xizhi's works are generally based on cursive and regular script, and his works in clerical script are few and far between. Although it is said that Wang Xizhi's early years were written in the clerical script of the Han Dynasty and Wei Dynasty, but what has been passed down to the later years are his cursive scripts, and there are very few of Wang Xizhi's famous works that are written in clerical script.

Wang Xizhi from his childhood is very fond of calligraphy, after decades of unremitting study, finally made him become the later admired "saint of the book". When Wang Xizhi was twelve years old, he found that his father, Wang Kuang, had a copy of "Pen Theory" in his hand, so he stole it and read it.

When Wang Xizhi's father found out, he was worried that the family tradition would be leaked out, so he took the book back. However, drunken calligraphy Wang Xizhi kneeling in front of Wang Kuang, allowed him to study, visible Wang Xizhi practicing calligraphy of the heart of the real.