Wang Zhihuan introduced.
Wang Zhihuan (688-742) was a famous poet in the prosperous Tang Dynasty. His name is Ji Ling, Han nationality, from Jiangzhou (now Xinjiang County, Shanxi Province). Bold and uninhibited, he often mourned swordsmanship, and his poems were sung by musicians at that time. At that time, he often sang with Gao Shi and Wang Changling, and was famous for describing the frontier fortress scenery. Representative works include Heron Pavilion and Liangzhou Ci. In his early years, Wang Zhihuan moved from Bingzhou (Taiyuan, Shanxi) to Jiangzhou (now Xinjiang County, Shanxi) and served as the main book of Hengshui in Jizhou. Li Di, the magistrate of Hengshui County, betrothed his three daughters to him. He was dismissed for being slandered. 1 later, he returned to serve as Qiu of Wen 'an County and died during his term of office. Wang Zhihuan is "generous, charming and talented". He was good at writing articles and poems in his early years and was often quoted as lyrics. Especially good at five-character poems, to describe the frontier scenery to win. He is a romantic poet. Jin Neng's "Epitaph of Wang Zhihuan" said that his poems or songs came from the army, and he sang a song that reminded him of mountains and bright moons, so small that he got the sound of a small cold wind, which spread to the movement and the population. But his works have only six quatrains, including three frontier poems. His poems are represented by Lusu and Liangzhou Ci. Zhang Taiyan called Liangzhou Ci "the most quatrains".