2. Book Tide in Beitang, edited by Yu Shinan [Tang], Beijing: China Bookstore, July 1989, photocopied Nanhai Kong Guangtao School Journal, 14th edition of Guangxu.
3. The Book of Beginners, edited by [Tang] Xu Jian, Si Yizu School, Beijing: Zhonghua Book Company, 1962, 1 edition, printed for the second time in February 2004, in three volumes.
4. Wen Yuan Hua Ying was edited by seventeen people including Liu Yun, Hu Meng, Xu Xuan and Bai Song. Beijing: Zhonghua Book Company, photocopying the remnants of Song Dynasty and supplementing the Ming edition, 1 May 9661Edition (1972 1 month binding). The second printing in July1982; 13rd printing in August, 990; The fourth printing was at 1995, with six volumes and one thousand volumes.
5. The Classification of Tang Poetry edited by Zhao Mengkui in Southern Song Dynasty was accepted by Wan Wei. It is the original book 100 volume, which is divided into eight categories, such as heaven and earth, mountains and rivers, and each category is divided into subcategories. * * * There are 1353 poets and 4079 1 poem. At present, there are only 5 volumes of Mountains and Rivers and 6 volumes of Plants, Insects and Fish.
6. Collation Certificate of Tang and Song Poetry, edited by Liu Kezhuang, collated by li geng and Xin Chen, People's Literature Publishing House, 65438+February 2002.
7. Three Thousand Poems of Tang and Song Dynasties-Ying Sui, edited by Rick Fang Gu (Fang Hui), approved by Ji Xiaolan, Beijing: China Bookstore,1March 990, and photocopied according to Sweeping Wild Houses, 1922. Fang Hui edited and collated Li Ying Kui Law, Shanghai: Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, 1 edition, April 2005, in three volumes. Ying Sui specially selected five-character and seven-character poems in Tang and Song Dynasties, and * * * selected 385 poets and 30 14 poems. It is people-oriented, giving consideration to all schools of thought, comprehensively reflecting the outline of poetry creation and the evolution of metrical poems in the 700 years of Tang and Song Dynasties, and making a detailed analysis and comment on the selected poems and the schools of Tang and Song Dynasties. This book has a great influence on later generations. Mr. Li devoted his whole life to the study of Ying Sui, which is an indispensable work to study the history of poetry and poetic theory.
8. "Tang Poetry Garden", edited by Zhang Zhixiang [Ming], 200 volumes, "There are tens of thousands of poems and thousands of people" ("Ordinary Cases"). * * * 39 departments (big classification), category 1094 (small classification). For example, there are sun, moon, stars and rivers under the sky 18 subclass. The number of poems actually received is 28,067, and the number of recorded poets is 1472 (excluding anonymity). This book is the largest extant anthology of Tang poems classified by theme. Toshio Nakajima, Ji Gu Academy in Tokyo, Japan, 1990- 1995, 7 volumes * * *, the first 6 volumes are photocopies of 200 volumes of Tang poetry published in Wanli period of Ming Dynasty.
9. Seven-character quatrains in Tang poetry. Edited by Ao Ying in Ming Dynasty. This book is devoted to seven unique works, which are divided into 15 categories, namely, thinking about the past, seeing off, giving gifts, thinking, sightseeing, traveling, gathering and observing, miscellaneous reading and Taoist interpretation. Most poems have concise comments, which are rare for other anthologies.
10. Poems about objects in the Tang Dynasty, also known as Selected Poems about Objects in the Tang Dynasty. Compiled by Nie Xian and others in the late Ming and early Qing Dynasties. The selected works are all rhythmic and have their own characteristics. The total number of volumes is 12, which is divided into various categories such as heaven, earth, water and wood, and arranged according to phonology.
1 1. Sikuquanshu Selected Poems of Ding Yupei Wenzhai.
12. "One hundred and twenty volumes of imperial painting poems of past dynasties" was determined by the holy father Michelle Ye, and volumes 1435 to 1436 of Sikuquanshu were collected in volumes 374 to 375; Chen Qingbangyan et al. Poems on Paintings in Past Dynasties, Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, 1993 1 1.
13. Selected Poems on Events, Rosa in Qing Dynasty, Chengdu Ancient Books Bookstore, 1984 1.
14. Four volumes of Selected Poems of Ancient and Modern Biechang, compiled in the style of Qing and Zhao. , Peng,, Wang Shizhen. Comments on you dong. Zhao Shi was born in Zhuji (present-day Zhejiang). Staying in a house for a long time will make you a poor man. This book consists of more than 900 lyric poems since the Song Dynasty. It is divided into three volumes: Volume I and Volume II are short notes, Volume III is medium notes, and Volume IV is long notes. There are 153 works at the end of each volume. Zhao put forward a title under each word, and deleted the title and order of the original, losing its original appearance, which is the best choice for family habits. There are some chords between words, but few. This is the forty-eighth year of Kangxi (1709), which is collected in the National Library of China.
15. Poems on Wine in Tang, Song, Yuan and Ming Dynasties, two volumes, Lujing Collection in Ming and Zhou Dynasties. Originally from Jiaxing (now Zhejiang), he lived in Jingyu Yizhi. "If you can write a good poem, you can sing along with your wife Sang Zhen and publish more books." Yimen Guangda was compiled by it. Gai is also a Chen Jiru, and the so-called Mountain Man will be next season. Selected Works is another selected work of Huang Dayu in Song Dynasty after Meiyuan. In the two volumes, * * * contains 3 1 poems of Tang and Five Dynasties, among which 133 poems describing wine. According to the lyrics, the editor also added topics, such as "drinking to make wine spring" and "wandering around the south building to make fish spring". Among them, there is Zhou Kazuo. It is the published edition of Jinling Jingshan Bookstore and the first edition of Yimen Guangbi and Series Integration.
16. Strange Tales from a Lonely Studio consists of four volumes, edited by Wang Sen in Qing Dynasty and revised by Jin Shen. This is the selection and classification of words in the order of festivals. According to twenty-three festivals, such as Yuanri, beginning of spring, Renri, Shangyuan, Tianchuan Festival, Chunshe, Cold Food, Qingming, Shangsi, Song Chun, Changxia, Chongwu, beginning of autumn, Qixi, Zhongyuan, Qiushe, Mid-Autumn Festival, the ninth day, beginning of winter, Winter, La and New Year's Eve, the choice of words for each category is different. This book has selected 346 poems written by the Tang, Song, Jin, Yuan and Ming Dynasties. At the end of the volume, there is a postscript by Shen Fu-hui: "There are four volumes of You Wang Jinxian's Writing Chen Ji, and there are also banknotes. A hidden in my husband's home, named Jin Xian. If the book is published or unpublished, it will be borrowed, and there will be mistakes in it. In autumn, Daoguang was awakened by the mountain. " Only the banknotes (184) printed in the 22nd year of Daoguang are kept in Nanjing Library.
17. Ten volumes of Poems in Mourning compiled by Chen Ding in Qing Dynasty. Chen Ding was born in Rugao, Jiangsu. This book consists of 1 122 poems written by Xiao Ling, a poet from the Tang and Song Dynasties to the Qing Dynasty, in which Yang Shen, Li Yu, Xu, Yang Wan, Fan Anlan, Deng Fanzhen and others are recorded. According to the style of poetry in past dynasties, it is arranged in the order of the number of words in the tone. The style of the selected words is not high, which symbolizes the romantic and charming style of the words, advocates the purpose of gentleness and gentleness, and entrusts with elegant theories, with "vanilla beauty, profound style; Loyal love, overflowing ink "is the only way to write lyrics, which opens the first sound of Changzhou Ci School." "Written in the thirty-ninth year of Qianlong (1774). There is a towel box of Shouzhuozhai today, which is well written. At the beginning, there were 2 1 inscriptions, such as Chen Dingxu, Xue's preface to visiting laymen, Xiong Lian's preface and Huang Li's preface. Collection of National Library of China.
18. Hundred Poems by Wu Ne (Series), Lin (School), Shanghai: Commercial Press, 1940 edition; Tianjin: Tianjin Ancient Books Bookstore 1992 March Edition (Volume I and Volume II)
19. Complete Poems of Tang Dynasty, compiled by [Qing] saints Peng Dingqiu and Ji Bian, (1) Kangxi Yangzhou Poetry Bureau, 12 letter, 120 volume, photocopied by Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, 1986. (2) Proofreading by Quan Wang, Beijing: Zhonghua Book Company, April 1960, 1 version; Second printing in August1979; 1985 65438+1the third printing in October; 14th printing in February, 990; 1992 65438+1October 5th printing, 25 paperbacks; 1999, horizontal simplified Chinese version. (3) Taipei: Wenshizhe Publishing House, 65438+1February 967. In the forty-fourth year of Kangxi (1705), during the southern tour of the Qing Dynasty, Cao Yin was ordered to open a library in Yangzhou to compile The Whole Tang Poetry, which was edited by ten registered academicians such as Patten and Shen Sanzeng. In just over a year, this 900-volume book was compiled. According to modern scholars' research, it was almost completely based on Hu Zhenheng's Tang Yin Tong Qian and Ji's Tang Poetry. This book contains 49,403 poems and 65,438+0,555 sentences, with 2,576 authors, each of whom has a biography, but the source of the poems is not specified. There is Kangxi Yangzhou Poetry Bureau, which is widely read, with 12 letters and 120 volumes. Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House 1986 photocopied accordingly. Zhonghua Book Company published a typographic version at 1960 and a simplified horizontal version at 1999, which is more convenient to use. This masterpiece has completed the collection of Tang poetry in one volume, and showed the face of Tang poetry to the world with its special authority and popularity. Since then, it has benefited Tang poetry lovers and researchers a lot and has not been abolished. However, there are still some shortcomings in The Complete Poem of Tang Dynasty, such as omission, misreporting, republishing, annotation errors and biographical errors. Japanese scholar Shihe Shining (formerly translated by Mao Heshing) compiled the Complete Poems of Tang Poetry in three volumes (there is a series of "Lack of Knowledge", with the twenty-fifth volume of "Complete Poems of Tang Poetry" printed by Zhonghua Book Company), supplemented by 66 poems and 279 sentences of 128 people. Wang Zhongmin is closely related to Complete Tang Poetry Supplement, Sun Wangyou's Complete Tang Poetry Supplement and Tong Yangyi 'an's Complete Tang Poetry Supplement. * * wrote nearly 2,000 poems, edited by Zhonghua Book Company 1982, and published in two volumes. Later, Chen revised "External Compilation" and continued to compile 60 volumes of Complete Tang Poetry, with 4663 poems and 1 199 sentences. Therefore, the external edition and the sequel were combined into a supplement to The Whole Tang Poetry, which was published by Zhonghua Book Company in 1992. In addition, Xu Jun's Textual Research on Dunhuang Poems (Zhonghua Book Company, June 2000) can still supplement nearly a thousand Tang poems.
Attached:
Full Tang poetry manuscript
[Qing] Qian (1582- 1664) and Ji (1630- 1674) were edited by Wan Li and Liu Zhaoyou.
Taipei: Lianjing Publishing Company, first edition in September,1979; Published for the second time in February 1986, with a total of 7 1 volume, Unpublished Draft Series II of Ming and Qing Dynasties (collected by the former National Central Library).
Selected works of Tang poetry
[Qing] Xu Zhuo (1624- 17 13)
Shanghai: Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, 1993, 1 1 month, two volumes, Selected Works of Thinking.
External editing of the whole Tang poetry
Wang Zhongmin (1903- 1975), Sun Wang (19 12-) and Tong Yang Yi 'an.
Beijing: Zhonghua Book Company, July 1982.
Taipei: Muduo Publishing House,1June, 972
Complete Tang poetry supplement
Editor Chen (1952-)
Beijing: Zhonghua Book Company, 1992 10, all three volumes.
Complete Tang poetry with annotations
Chen (1924-2000) is the chief editor, and Chen Tiemin (1938-) and Peng Qingsheng (1938-) are the deputy editors.
Beijing: Culture and Art Publishing House, 200 1, all five volumes.
20. Lin's Collection of Pronouns in Tang Dynasty, Commercial Press,1933; There are 82 pronouns in the Tang Dynasty, among which 1 134. Attached with proofreading instructions, indicating the source of selected words and the author's resume. Beijing: Literature Ancient Books Publishing House, June, 1956, published by Commercial Press 1933. 1957 10 Beijing Fourth Seal. The author of pronouns in Tang Dynasty is 865,438+0, and the words are 65,438+065,438+047 (once said, 65,438+065,438+048), which is another large-scale collection of pronouns in Tang Dynasty after the whole Tang Dynasty. His words are taken from the postscript of Huajian Collection, Zunqian Collection, Jinyu Collection and Quantang Poetry. Although the selection is not very accurate, it has been collected on a large scale. However, it is a great pity that Dunhuang Ci was not included. Books are arranged according to people, and Tang Ci is arranged according to the author's chronological order, which breaks the traditional convention that emperors come first and women come second. At the end of the volume, there are biographies of the author, textual research on the authenticity of the works, collating the similarities and differences of hundred schools of thought's words and phrases, and anecdotes about the works of poets in the Song Dynasty.
2 1. Five Pronouns in Tang Dynasty, edited by Zhang Zhanghuang Society, Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, 1986 February. More than 2,500 words, quite rich, with comments after each word is also very special. The shortcomings of this book are as follows: first, there is no strict standard for choosing poems. As long as there is a book that earns its income by lyrics, it is regarded as including lyrics; Second, the source of each word is in no particular order, and many sources are too late. Dunhuang Ci is almost entirely based on Wang, Ren and Rao. Third, we don't pay much attention to the identification of the authenticity of works. Later generations changed Tang poetry or Yuefu into ci, without making any analysis, and made a lot of forgeries. Song, Yuan and Ming dynasties created many poems about immortals and ghosts. These problems obviously affect the academic quality of the book.
22. Five Pronouns in Tang Dynasty, edited by Zeng,, and Liu Zunming, Zhonghua Book Company, 1999, 12, two volumes. According to the actual situation of Ci music in Tang Dynasty, it is divided into positive part and auxiliary part. The positive part includes Qu Ci, which is limited to the centralized collection of Tang and Song Ci and clearly recognized in Tang and Song classics. Assist the editor to collect the works whose poems are still controversial, and define some standards to ensure the compilation quality of the whole book. At the same time, we pay great attention to the use of first-hand documents as much as possible, pay attention to the use of book versions, so as to make the recorded words credible, and carefully review and revise controversial and mutually seen works. Although there are still some problems to be discussed in details (for example, some erroneous ideas of Ci-poetry books in Ming and Qing Dynasties are still followed, and works on the same topic are divided into original and supplementary versions due to different publications, and biographies can be slightly supplemented), this book is more rigorous and prudent than previous books in dealing with extremely thorny issues and has reached a higher academic level.
23. Complete Works of Song Poetry, Beijing: Peking University Publishing House,1991-1998. In the mid-1980s, Peking University Institute of Ancient Literature began to compile The Whole Song Poetry. Fu Xuancong, Sun Qinshan, Ni Qixin, Xin Chen and Xu Yimin. This book has 72 volumes. According to preliminary statistics, there are 9079 authors, 247 183 poems, 5983 incomplete poems (couplets) and 323 poems (sentences) in the catalogue. The founding time of the Song Dynasty was more than 20 years longer than that of the Tang Dynasty, but the number of surviving documents was several times that of the Tang Dynasty. The anthology of Song people has been preserved so far, four to five times more than that of Tang Dynasty. Only three people in the Tang Dynasty had more than 1000 poems, and it is estimated that there were more than 100 poems in the Song Dynasty. A large part of the Song Collection was compiled by the officials of Siku Library from Yongle Ceremony, which is very serious. At the same time, the cataloging and research of Song poetry is much worse than that of Tang poetry. The catalogue of the whole Tang poetry can be traced back to the Southern Song Dynasty, and it was not until the Ming and Qing Dynasties that the whole Tang poetry appeared after several generations of continuous efforts. Even so, there are thousands of omissions and misunderstandings, especially in biographies. The Whole Song Poetry is the work of Lu Lanlun, and the only books that are slightly similar are Li E's Chronicle of Song Poetry and Lu Xinyuan's Addendum. There is no basis, and the difficulty can be imagined. Complete Song Poems completed the comprehensive compilation of Song poetry for the first time, supplemented a large number of poems outside the collection for the authors with collections, made the first collection of poems for more than 9,000 authors without collections, and carefully sorted out all the poems collected by Song people. Generally, the main rare books handed down from generation to generation are used for comprehensive collation. Each collection has a written explanation, and the original compilation order of other collections is all preserved, which preserves the information of the original collection to the greatest extent, such as the poems of the Northern Song Dynasty, and roughly preserves the writing order of works since ancient times, which is an extremely important clue for scholars to determine the age and writing motivation of works. The Whole Song Poetry explains the literature sources of all lost works, summarizes the lives of nearly 10,000 authors, and explains the evidence. Although incomplete, it is very valuable, because most of them have no research foundation before. The author's attribution, the difference between authenticity and falsehood, the order of some works and the obvious differences in the text are verified and distinguished.
24. Song Ci, edited by Tang Guizhang and revised by Wang Zhongwen, Beijing: Zhonghua Book Company, 1965, 1 version; 16th printing in Beijing in June, 995, all five volumes. 1940 The Commercial Press published 300 volumes, with 2 volumes attached. When Zhonghua Book Company was republished after its establishment in People's Republic of China (PRC), Wang Zhongwen revised and supplemented it, replaced a large number of original editions, and added more than 240 poets, 1400 words. Book * * * recipient 1330, with about 20,000 words. Wang also re-examined the poet's deeds, rewritten his biography and quoted more than 350 books. Later, it was revised and supplemented, and a supplementary explanation was written. The first revision 1965 was published in June. Reprinted in 1979, with amendments and supplements by Tang Guizhang. Wang Zhongwen, the son of Wang Guowei, is well versed in the literature and history of the Song Dynasty and knows the notes of the Song people like the back of his hand. Tang Guizhang suggested that after the revision of Song Ci, the title should be changed to Selected Works of Tang Guizhang and Wang Zhongwen.
A collection/anthology of some works by a writer.
25. Selected Works of China Poets (40 volumes), Taipei: Liu Yuan Publishing House, 7 1.
26. Proofreading Liu Sihan's Qujiang Collection, Guangdong People's Publishing House, 1986 10.
27. Collating and commenting on The Complete Works of Li Bai (eight volumes) edited by Zhan E199665438+February.
28. Detailed Notes on Du Fu's Poems (five volumes) [Qing] Autumn, Zhonghua Book Company, 1979 10 edition, 1989 12 third printing; 14th printing in April, 995, Basic Series of China Classical Literature.
29. Notes on Wang Collation (four volumes) by Chen Tiemin, Zhonghua Book Company,1August, 997.
30. Notes on Wang Wei's Poetry, Yang Wensheng, Sichuan People's Publishing House, September 2003.
3 1. Notes on Meng Haoran's Poems Tong Peiji, Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, May 2000, China Classical Literature Series.
32. Collation of Sun Qinshan in Gao Jishi, Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House,1February 984.
33. Notes on Collections, Chen Tiemin and Hou, Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, 198 1 year August 1 year edition, 2nd edition, September 2004, China Classical Literature Series.
34. Liu Baohe's Biography of Li Qi's Poems, Shaanxi Education Press,1May 990.
35. Collation of Complete Works of Han Yu (five volumes), edited by Qu and Chang Sichun, Sichuan University Press,1July, 996.
36. Notes of Bai Juyi (six volumes) Zhu Jincheng, Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House,198865438+February.
37. Notes on Liu Zongyuan's Poems by Wang Guoan, Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House,1September, 993.
38. Notes on Liu Yuxi's Chronology: Zhao, Chen Huixing and Liu Yuxi, Shandong University Press,1September, 997.
39. Chronological Collation of Complete Works of Liu Yuxi (Volume II), Tao Min, Yuelu Bookstore, 2003, 1 1.
40. Poems of Li Shangyin (five volumes), Liu and Yu Shucheng, Zhonghua Book Company,198865438+February.
4 1. Notes on Wen Feiqing's Poems [Qing] Zeng Yi's Notes, Supplementary Notes, [Qing] Gu Xu's Notes, Proofreading, Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, July 1980, 1 Edition; 1998 March New 1 Edition, China Classical Literature Series.
42. Notes on Li He's Poems, People's Literature Publishing House, 1959, 1 version; 1 March 9981print
43. Wang Shi Hua Li Zhiliang, Bashu Bookstore, June 2002, 5438+ 10.
44. Proofreading Su Shi's Poems (eight volumes), Zhonghua Book Company, February 1982, edition1; 1987 10 second printing, Basic Series of China Classical Literature.
45. Notes on Huang Tingjian's Poems (five volumes) Proofread by Liu Shangrong, Zhonghua Book Company, May 2003.
46. Lu (five volumes), Zhonghua Book Company, 1976 1 1 edition; 12nd printing in May, 977
47. Nie Anfu, Notes on Wei Zhuang, Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, April 2002.
48. Biography of Wei Zhuang's Poems, Tao Qi, Shandong Education Press, June 2002.
49. Proofreading Li Liyu Jing Ci by Zhan Antai, People's Literature Publishing House, 1 March 9581Edition; 1 March 9981print
50. Notes on Ouyang Xiu's Ci, Huangshe, Zhonghua Book Company,198665438+February.
5 1. Collation of Collected Works of Xue Sports, Zhonghua Book Company, 1994, 1997 February edition, 1997 February second printing.
52. Notes on Sheng Rui Chronology of Dongpo's Ci Poetry, Sanqin Publishing House,1September, 998.
53. Notes on Chronology of Qin Guanji, Zhou Yigan, Cheng and Zhou Lei, People's Literature Publishing House, July 2006, 5438+0.
54. Collection of Muslim Books, revised by Xue, Zhonghua Book Company, 2002, 65438+February.
55. Collation of Li Qingzhao's Collected Works, Wang Zhongwen, People's Literature Publishing House, 1979, 1 edition, 1997,1/second printing.
56. Notes on Li Qingzhao's Collected Works "Notes on Xu Peijun and Shanghai": Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, 2002.
57. Notes on the Chronology of Jiang Baishi's Ci, Xia, Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, 198 1 May.
58. Notes on the Chronology of Jiaxuan Ci (Revised Edition) Deng Guangming, Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, 1993, 10; 12nd printing in May, 995
59. Appreciation of Li Bai's Poems, edited by Pei Fei, Bashu Bookstore, 1988 February.
60. Du Fu's Appreciation of Poems and Analysis of Summer, Liaoning Education Press,1March 986.
6 1. Selected Appreciation of Liang Lihe's Poems, Guangxi Education Press, 1987.
62. Detailed explanation of Li Yu's Li Qingzhao's ci, edited by Jin Jicang, Sichuan Literature and Art Publishing House, 1985 August.
63. Appreciation Collection of Liu Yong's Ci, edited by Xie, Bashu Publishing House, July 1987.
64. Comment on Selected Poems of Liu Yong by Xie, Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, 2002.
65. Proofreading by Liu Yongji, Sun Guanggui and Xu Jing. Changsha: Yuelu Bookstore, 2003.
66. Yang Liuan's "Xiao Feng Canyue": Ran Editor Zhengzhou: Henan Literature and Art Publishing House, 2002, "Collection of Famous Tang and Song Dynasties"
67. But I can't see the sadness of Kyushu. Zhengzhou: Henan Literature and Art Publishing House, edited by Lu You and Gao Lihua, 2002 Collection of Tang and Song Masters.
68. The flag of the Zhuang nationality holds thousands of people. Xin Qiji, edited by Deng Hongmei, Zhengzhou: Henan Literature and Art Publishing House, 2003.
69. Appreciation of Li Qingzhao's Ci, edited and published by Qilu Bookstore, 1986 April.
70. Appreciation of Zhou Bangyan's Ci, Qian, Zhongzhou Ancient Books Publishing House, 1988 1 month.
7 1. Appreciation of Xin Qiji's Ci. Edited and published by Qilu Bookstore,198665438+February.
72. Appreciation of Lu You's poems, edited by Duan Xiaohua, Shaanxi People's Publishing House, 1988 1.
73. Comment on Liu Yangzhong's New Interpretation of Yan Shu's Ci: Beijing: China Bookstore, 2003.
74. Comment on "A New Interpretation of Li Qingzhao's Ci: China Bookstore" edited by Chen Zumei, 2003.
75. Selected comments on Wang Anshi's poems written by Gao Keqin in Shanghai: Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, 2002.
76. Comment on Huang Tingjian's Selected Poems in Shanghai, Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, 2003.
77. Comments on Selected Poems of Qin, Zhou and Luo Ligang Shanghai: Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, 2003.
78. Comment on Liu Yangzhong's Selected Poems of Zhou Bangyan, Shanghai: Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, 2003.
79. Comments on Chen Zumei's Selected Poems of Li Qingzhao Shanghai: Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, 2002.
80. Selected Comments on Cai Yijiang's Poems Written by Lu You in Shanghai: Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, 2002.
8 1. Comment on Selected Poems of Xin Qiji: Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, 2002
82. Selected Works of Xin Qiji and Notes of Zhu Decai. Beijing: People's Literature Publishing House, 2002.
Selected Works (Modern Classification)
83. Integration of classified appreciation of the essence of Tang poetry, edited by Pan Baiqi, Hohai University Press, 1989 1, 1474. It is divided into 55 departments, generally arranged in the order of nature, human beings, economic base and superstructure. There are 222 doors (there are 33 doors in the scenic spot alone), and there are 1 175 categories (there are 100 categories in Huamen alone). * * * earned 2,706 poems by 4 18 Tang poets, which basically collected the essence of the whole Tang poetry. Appreciate all kinds of poems, and master one or several kinds of poems with an appreciation article.
84. Classification, Appreciation and Integration of the Essence of Song Poetry, edited by Pan Baiqi, Hohai University Press, 199 1 year 65438+February.
85. The Collection of Ancient Poems was compiled by China Ancient Literature Research Office of Guangxi Normal University, edited by Hu Guangzhou and Zhou, edited by Zhang, and published by Guangxi People's Publishing House, 1990. Preface of Wang Yunxi. All four volumes. Considering the categories of ancient books, according to the requirements of modern people, they are divided into 22 categories, including natural phenomena, rivers and lakes, mountains and rivers, seasons, flowers, fruit trees (I and II), birds and animals, insects and fish, palaces, terraces and artifacts. Divided into 334 details, * * * compiled more than 2,730 poems of various genres and themes, from the Book of Songs to the late Qing Dynasty.
86. The Essence of Tang Poetry, Jilin Literature and History Publishing House, 1994. There are about 6,000 selected poems in 30 categories, which is the most classified anthology of Tang poetry in recent years. The classification refers to Tang Poetry Garden compiled by Zhang Zhixiang in Ming Dynasty.
87. Selected Readings of Tang Poetry, selected by Zhou Benchun, Zhejiang Ancient Books Publishing House, 1985 1 1.
88. Liu Yongji, Comments on Poems about Things in Tang Dynasty, Sun Yat-sen University Press, 1985.
89. Selected Farewell Poems in Tang Dynasty, selected by Wang Dingxiang, China Geo University Press, 1989, 10.
90. "Farewell Tonight: 100 Farewell Poems of Tang Poetry", Bai, comments, 199 1 September.
9 1. Three hundred newly compiled Tang poems, Jiangsu Ancient Books Publishing House, 199 1 year. The selected 333 poems are divided into 10 categories.
92. A Review of Frontier Poems in Tang Dynasty, Qi Xubang, Shanxi People's Publishing House, 1987.
93. Notes on Selected Frontier Poems in Tang Dynasty, edited by Hu Dajun, Gansu Education Press, 199 1 year (1990? )
94. Notes on Selected Frontier Poems in Tang Dynasty, Sun, Hefei: Huangshan Bookstore,1September 992.
95. Selected Works of China's Precious Poems (Volume I), Zhao Changping, Shanghai Bookstore, 1993 August.
96. Selected Poems of China, Chen Dakai, Shanghai Bookstore, 1993 August.
97. Three Hundred Newly Edited Song Poems, edited by Wu Zaiqing, Jiangsu Ancient Books Publishing House,1September, 994. The selected 339 poems are divided into 9 categories.
98. A Study on the Classification of Tang Poetry, Zhang Haoxun, Jiangsu Education Press,1July, 999.
99. Tang Tisong Yunxinyin, edited by Jin Chen, Wanjuan Publishing Company (formerly Liaoning Pictorial Publishing House), September 2005; Central Literature Publishing House, June 5438+ 10. This book collects some Tang and Song poems, and divides the selected works into eight chapters: season, landscape, labor, sentiment, friendship, personality, politics and friendship. Under most articles, several subject categories are divided. In the introduction of these poems, reading guidance and sentiment words are added, which provides reference for readers to appreciate Tang and Song poems. The compilation and selection of this book, from the selection of articles, arrangement, preface to introduction, understanding of words and comments, lasted for half a year, and the manuscript was changed 14 times.