The content of "Hundred Rhymes in Cursive Script" is mainly about the verses of cursive script.
"Caojue Baiyunge" is an important cursive script song in ancient China and an important way to learn cursive script. "Hundred Rhymes in Cursive Script" uses the form of verses to help memorize the structure of cursive script. "Hundred Rhymes in Cursive Script" may have begun in the Song Dynasty, but its original version cannot be found today.
However, from the citations of Zhenzi recorded in the fifth literary volume of the sequel to "Shi Lin Guang Ji" compiled by Chen Yuanliang of the Southern Song Dynasty, "Cao Jue Calligraphy", it can be seen that at least in the middle of the Northern Song Dynasty Huangyou, "Cao Jue Calligraphy" "Hundred Rhymes" has become popular.
Extended information
The main version of "Cao Jue Bai Yun Ge":
The original version of "Cao Jue Bai Yun Ge" is no longer known about its content. But the most famous one is the one signed by "Cai Zhenzi" in the Northern Song Dynasty. He cut the "cursive script" which was circulated in the market at that time as "one hundred and twenty rhymes, four hundred and one crosses" to form "one hundred rhymes". ” is written in cursive script, but the book is no longer handed down.
The earliest published version of Cao Jue that we have seen is the "Cursive Script Hundred Rhymes Jue" carved in the Yuan Dynasty. This book has 76 words in 76 rhymes, but the engraving is not precise, and the scanned version is not detailed, and it is fragmented and uneven. Ink stains are also common. Hong Kong's "Shu Pu" magazine, issues 21 to 29, once contained the inkstone's notes.