The cloud pavilion in Zhuge Lu, Nanyang, is Yang Xiong.
Yang Xiong (53 BC-18 AD), Zi Ziyun, Han nationality. Officials and scholars in the Western Han Dynasty. A native of Chengdu (now Pidu District, Chengdu, Sichuan), a Shu county in the Western Han Dynasty.
Yang Xiong is studious, stuttering, well-read, and good at Ci. In his forties, he began to visit Chang 'an, the capital of Beijing, and played Fu such as Ganquan and Hedong. When he became emperor, he served Huang Menlang. Wang Mang was then a doctor and a school book, Tianlu Pavilion. Yang Xiong is the most famous lyricist in the Western Han Dynasty after Sima Xiangru. The so-called "Xie Ma came alone to find a story, and the articles were ashamed of Yang Xiong". In Liu Yuxi's famous "Humble Room Inscription", the "West Shu Zi Yun Pavilion" is Yang Xiong.
Extended information:
Humble room inscription
The mountain is not high, but there are immortals. The water is not deep, and the dragon is the spirit. I am a humble room, but I am virtuous. The moss marks are green on the upper stage, and the grass color is green in the curtain. Laughing and having a great scholar, no Bai Ding. You can tune the lute and read the golden classics. There is no confusion, and there is no cumbersome form. Zhuge Lu in Nanyang, Yun Pavilion in Xishu, and Kong Ziyun: What's the matter?
The Inscription of Humble Rooms is an inscription written by Liu Yuxi, a poet in the Tang Dynasty. The full text is just 81 words, and the author expresses his interest in being noble, caring for the poor and enjoying the road, and not colluding with the secular world by praising the humble room, which also reflects the author's thought of being conceited and self-absorbed.
The level of the article is clear, starting with the mountains and rivers, pointing out the theme of "I am a humble room, but I am virtuous and fragrant", and then starting from the aspects of outdoor scenery, indoor people and things in the room, rendering the elegant realm of humble room, and introducing the residence of ancient Junyan. The words of ancient saints strengthen the meaning and end with rhetorical questions, with a long aftertaste.
Reference: Baidu Encyclopedia-Humble Room Ming