**10,000 Fans Incentive Plan
All the worlds are brothers"The previous sentence was"Mo Yanyuan outside the ghost gate"。This poem comes from the Northern Song Dynasty literati Huang Tingjian's "Two Bamboo Branch Words". The full poem is as follows:
One hundred and eight floating clouds linger, and the sunset is forty-eight crossings.
Mo Yanyuan is far away outside the ghost gate, and all the people in the world are brothers.
The background of the creation of this poem is that Huang Tingjian was relegated to Qianzhou, and he tasted hardships on the road to debasement, but he was still open-minded, and after arriving in Qianzhou, although it was a wild place, he could still settle down, and the residents here could also be like brothers, expressing Huang Tingjian's identification with the local culture and his optimistic and cheerful character.
Huang Tingjian (1045-1105), known as Luzhi, was a famous writer, calligrapher and lyricist in the Northern Song Dynasty. He was born in Fenning, Hongzhou (now Xiushui County, Jiujiang City, Jiangxi Province), and was the founder of the Jiangxi Poetry School, known as "one ancestor and three ancestors" along with Du Fu, Chen Shidao and Chen Youyi. Huang Tingjian has been brilliant since childhood, with an amazing memory, and after being a jinshi in the fourth year of Zhiping (1067), he has held a number of official positions, including Ye County Lieutenant, Taihe Zhixian, Cheng Yilang, etc. He participated in the revision of the "Zizhi Tongjian" and presided over the compilation of the "Records of the Divine Sect".
Huang Tingjian's poetry style is deeply influenced by Du Fu, focusing on rhetoric and sentence construction, emphasizing that "there is no place for a word", and writing more about personal daily life, with a strange style. His calligraphy is also quite attained, good at calligraphy, cursive, regular script is also a family of its own, is one of the "Song Four Families". Huang Tingjian was as famous as Su Shi during his lifetime, known as "Su Huang", and wrote works such as "Valley Words". His poetry and calligraphy had a profound influence on later generations, and he is regarded as a master of literature and calligraphy.
Huang Tingjian's life is full of twists and turns. During the Zhezong period, he was degraded because of the many false records he had repaired, and he was demoted to Fuzhou and placed in Qianzhou. In the second year of Chongning (1103), his collection of essays was destroyed by the imperial court, and in the same year, he was removed from his official title and detained in Yizhou. Finally, in September of the fourth year of Chongning (1105), he died of hunger and cold at the age of 61.