Qian Kun
Qian Kun, whose birth and death are unknown, was born in Qiantang (now Hangzhou, Zhejiang). He was the son of Qian Zhen, the king of Wu and Yue in the Five Dynasties. He returned to the Song Dynasty and took the title of Jinshi in the second year of Chunhua (1991) of Taizong (Volume 14 of Longping collection and the third year of Chunhua in the collection of Qian's Chuanfang) as the main book of Baoying County in Chuzhou (the collection of Qian's Chuanfang).
brief introduction
He was a judge of the third division. Renzong learned Lu, Hao, Quan, Bo, Zi, Shou and Xu in his time. He was a broad and simple government official. He went to the right to admonish officials and served as a secretary. The year of his death was 76. He once applied for a local post and said, "but if you have a crab, you can't pass the sentence. It's enough to comfort you." Because the Song Dynasty states all set up a general sentence, with the nature of monitoring prefectures, so there is this saying. He is the author of ten volumes of Jianyi poetry anthology, which has been lost. There is a biography in Volume 48 of Dongdu shilue, and a biography of Qian Weiyan in volume 317 of song history.
Poetry Review
There are many topics about the temple of marquis in Huaiyin, but Qian gongkun's advice is the best. He said: "although it's thick to build an altar to pay homage to the sun, it's already a deep concern when you quietly seal it. Long Zhun knew that it was the same beak, so the general should have the heart of five lakes." (from the miscellany of Qingxiang)
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