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Cao Cao was an accomplished poet, as were his sons Cao Pi and Cao Zhi.Cao Cao was also a patron of poets such as Xu Gan. [1] Of Cao Cao's works, only a remnant remain today. His verses, unpretentious yet profound, helped to reshape the poetic style of his time and beyond, eventually contributing to the poetry styles associated with Tang dynasty poetr
Cao Cao considered making him heir and Cao Zhi had support from a significant fraction of his father's court, even though he was one of Cao Cao's younger sons. However, because Cao Zhi was negligent of decorum and his father's decrees, he eventually disappointed his father and the position of heir went to his elder brother Cao Pi. After Cao Cao ...
Poetry of Cao Cao: Cao Cao: Jian'an poetry "Tiandi yinyang jiaohuan dalefu" Bai Xingjian: Fu: 天地阴阳交欢大乐赋: Tiāndì yīnyáng jiāohuān dàlèfù "The Quatrain of Seven Steps" Cao Zhi: Jian'an poetry: 七步詩: Qi1 Bu4 Shi1 "Quiet Night Thought" Li Bai, also known as "Li Bo" and "Li Po" [note 25] Tang poetry: Complete Tang ...
Cao Gong Ji: Lord Cao Collection: Compilation of the works of Cao Cao. Extant. 38.970, n 2 陳思王集 Chen Si Wang Ji: Collected Works of Prince Si of Chen [Cao Zhi] Cao Zhi: Poetry, letters, essays. Exant. 2.76 從軍詩 Congjun Shi: Embedded: Wang Can: Poetry in praise of Cao Cao's military prowess: 1.47 大墓賦 Da Mu Fu: Rhapsody on the ...
Cao Zhi is also noted for his association with the dramatically composed and life-saving poem known as "The Quatrain of Seven Steps". Cao Pi wrote an essay Seven Scholars of Jian'an which was influential in the development of the Jian'an school of poetry. One of the poets patronized by Cao Cao and considered to be one of the "Seven Scholars of ...
Cao Cao, Cao Pi and Cao Zhi are known collectively as the "Three Caos". The Three Caos' poetry, together with additional poets, became known as the Jian'an style, which contributed to Tang and later poetry. Cao Cao also wrote verse in the older four-character per line style characteristic of the Classic of Poetry.
Some troops leave the battlefield injured. Others return from war with mental wounds. Yet many of the 2 million Iraq and Afghanistan veterans suffer from a condition the Defense Department refuses to acknowledge: Moral injury.
Cao Cao holds a feast on the Bronze Bird Terrace, in chapter 56 of the illustrated 1591 edition of the Romance of the Three Kingdoms novel. The Bronze Bird Terrace (traditional Chinese: 銅雀臺; simplified Chinese: 铜雀台; pinyin: Tóngquètái) was an iconic structure in the city of Ye built in AD 210 by Cao Cao, the prominent warlord of the late Eastern Han dynasty.