About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 31. Chapters: Zuo Si, Yun Wang, Hong Ying, Tao Yuanming, Lin Huiyin, Li Qingzhao, Li Dawei, Mo Xuanqing, Fan Chengda, Lu Tong, Gid Sh shin, Li Shangyin, Zhu Ziqing, Zhang Ji, Yuan Mei, Wen Yiduo, Yuan Hongdao, Fu Xuan, Lu Ji, Gu Cheng, Liu Zongyuan, Jia Dao, Luo Yin, Wei Yingwu, Meng Haoran, Pan Lei, Sima Xiangru, Ma Zhiyuan, Wen Tong, Zang Kejia, Huang Zunxian, Cui Yuan, Lu Lun, Yu Xin, Jose dos Santos Ferreira, Wang Zhihuan, Zhang Xianliang, Mei Yaochen, Su Manshu, Zhao Luorui, Xie Lingyun, Mang Ke, Cui Hao, Ou Daren, Lian Heng, Qian Qi, Yang Wanli, Jin Tianhe, Qiu Fengjia, Wang Changling, Qiu Wei, Wang Bo, Ngoc Minh, Wang Jian, Shen Quanqi, Zheng Min, Wen Tingyun, Ye Wenfu, Liang Youyu, Jiang Shiquan, Wang Han, The Latter Five Poets of the Southern Garden, Cheng Enze, Gai Qi, Sikong Shu, Pi Rixiu, Zhuo Wenjun, Cen Shen, He Zhizhang, Zunun Kadir, Liu Yuxi, He Qifang, Liu Zhongyong, Wang Wei, Li Pin, Xu Zhongxing, Li Dongyang, Yuan Shansong, Du Xunhe, Fan Yun, Gao Shi, Zhong Rong, Jiang Kui, Wang Yucheng, Gu Gong, The Latter Seven Masters, Lu Sidao, Liu Yong. Excerpt: Zuo Si (Chinese characters: Hanyu Pinyin: Zu S ) (250-305), courtesy name Taichong ( ), was a writer and poet of the Western Jin. Zuo was born to an aristocratic family of Confucian scholars in Linzi. His mother died young. His father, Zuo Yong, was promoted to imperial official in charge of the imperial archives. Zuo Si would often play word games with his sister, Zuo Fen, who later became famous in her own right as a writer and a concubine of Emperor Wu of Jin. In approximately 280, Zuo wrote the "Shu Capital Rhapsody" ( ), the first of his rhapsodies on the three capitals of the Three Kingdoms Period. The Shu Capital Rhapsody described the city of Chengdu and the surrounding area. This work features the earliest surviving reference to Mount Emei. The wo...