Biography
Guo Moruo (November 16, 1892 ~ June 12, 1978), formerly known as Guo Kaizhen, is a famous scientist, literary scholar, archaeologist, thinker, revolutionary activist and poet. Born in Shawan, Leshan, Sichuan Province, he was enrolled in a family school at an early age, and began to accept democratic ideas when he entered the Jiading Higher Education Hall in 1906, and in the spring of 1914 he went to Japan to study, firstly as a medical doctor, and then as a writer. During this period, he came into contact with the works of Tagore, Goethe, Shakespeare, Whitman and other foreign writers.
In the spring of 1918, he wrote his first novel, and in the early summer of 1918, he wrote his earliest poem, "The Temptation of Death. In June 1921, he organized the Creation Society with Cheng Faiguo and Yu Dafu and edited the Creation Quarterly, and in 1923, after graduating from the Imperial University of Japan and returning to China, he continued to edit the Creation Weekly and Creation Day. 1924 to 1927, he wrote the historical dramas Wang Zhaojun, Nie Ying, and Zhuo Wenjun, and in 1928 he lived in exile in Japan, where he joined the League of Chinese Left-Wing Writers in 1930. "In 1930, he joined the Chinese Left-Wing Writers' League and participated in the activities of the Tokyo branch of the League, and in 1938, he became a member of the National Association of Literary and Artistic Circles Against the Enemy of China. In 1938, he became a member of the National Association of Chinese Literature and Artists Against the Enemy. During this period, he wrote six historical dramas, including "Qu Yuan". He also wrote historical treatises such as Ten Criticisms and The Age of Bronze, as well as a large number of miscellaneous essays, essays and poems. After the founding of New China, he was a member of the Central People's Government, Vice Premier of the State Council and Director of the Culture and Education Committee, President of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Chairman of the first, second and third sessions of the All-China Federation of Literary and Art Circles, and a member of the 9th, 10th, and 11th Central Committees of the China*** Producer's Party, Vice-Chairman of the Standing Committee of the First to Fifth National People's Congresses, and a member, Standing Committee Member and Vice-Chairman of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference. His works include "Ode to Xinhua", "Dongfeng Collection", "Cai Wenji", "Wu Zetian", "Li Bai and Du Fu", etc.
The masterpiece of this period of the New Literature Movement, the collection of poems "The Goddess", got rid of the constraints of traditional Chinese poetry, and fully reflected the spirit of the times of the "May Fourth", which opened up a generation of poems in the history of Chinese literature, and is the most outstanding revolutionary romantic poems of the contemporary era. After 1923, he systematically studied Marxist theory and advocated proletarian literature; in 1926, he took part in the Northern Expedition and served as deputy director of the Political Department of the National Revolutionary Army; after Chiang Kai-shek's purge of the party in 1927, he took part in the Nanchang Uprising led by the Chinese ****anist Party; and in February 1928, because of his being wanted by the Kuomintang government, he was exiled in Japan, where he devoted his life to researching ancient Chinese society, and was the author of In February 1928, he was arrested by the KMT government and went into exile in Japan, where he studied ancient Chinese society and wrote important academic works such as "Study of Ancient Chinese Society" and "Study of Oracle Bone Characters".After the outbreak of the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression in 1937, he returned to China and served as the director of the Third Department of the Political Department of the Military Commission, and then changed to the director of the Cultural Affairs Committee, uniting progressive cultural figures to engage in the resistance against Japanese Aggression and salvation movement.After 1946, he stood in the forefront of the pro-democracy movement, and became the revolutionary flag in the cultural circles of the areas under the rule of KMT. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, he was elected chairman of the All-China Federation of Literary and Art Circles, served as vice-premier of the State Council and director of the Culture and Education Committee, president of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and vice-chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress, etc. He was also elected as a member of the Ninth, Tenth and Eleventh Central Committees of the Chinese People's ****s Producers' Party. He edited the Chinese Historical Manuscripts and Oracle Bones Collection, and all his works were compiled into the 38 volumes of Guo Moruo Complete Works.
Guo Moruo is one of the main founders of the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC).
In May 1958, in order to modernize science and technology, accelerate the training of national defense construction and cutting-edge science and technology of the much-needed specialists, Guo Moruo, then president of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), together with some famous scientists, put forward to the Party Central Committee to create a new university by the CAS proposal. The proposal was supported by Party and state leaders Liu Shaoqi, Zhou Enlai, Deng Xiaoping, Nie Rongzhen, and approved by the Central Secretariat. In September of the same year, the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC) was formally established in Beijing, and Guo Moruo was appointed by the State Council as its president. Since then, Guo Moruo served as the president of the University of Science and Technology of China for 20 years, showing his profound knowledge and deep educational thinking. Under his leadership, the Academy of Sciences carried out the policy of "running a school by the whole academy and combining the departments", implemented the policy of integrating scientific research and education, gave full play to the advantages of the academy's research institutes in terms of strong teachers and excellent scientific research equipments, and gave full support to the construction of the University of Science and Technology; established the principle of combining teaching and scientific research, science and technology, theory and practice, and advocated the principle of "hard work", and the principle of "hard work". The principles of combining teaching and scientific research, science and technology, and theory and practice were established, the excellent school spirit of "diligent study, parallel advancement of red specialties, and integration of theory and practice" was advocated, a new education system for cultivating emerging, marginal, and cutting-edge scientific and technological talents was established, and a democratic academic atmosphere of openness and compatibility with different schools of thought was formed, which have shown a strong vitality in the practice of running the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC) and laid a solid foundation for the long-term development of the University. All these have shown strong vitality in the practice of running the university in the future, and laid a solid foundation for the long-term development of the university. On the occasion of the 30th anniversary of the founding of the University of Science and Technology of China, a bronze statue of Guo Moruo was erected on the East Campus.
Writings and Essays
Poetry collection "Goddess", "Changchun Collection", "Starry Sky", "Tidal Wave Collection", "Camel Collection", "Dongfeng Collection", "Hundred Flowers", "Ode to Xinhua", and "Yingchunqu";
Historical scripts "Qu Yuan" (which has been filmed and released), "Tiger's Talisman", "Flower of Tongdi", "Peacock Gallows", "Nan Guanqiu Grass", "Zhuowen Jun", "Wang Zhaojun", "Cai Wen Ji", "Wang Zhaojun" and "Cai Wen Ji".
Memoirs "Hongboqu", commentary "Rooster Collection";
Monographs "Study of Ancient Chinese Society", "Study of Oracle Bones", "Study of Divining Rhetoric", "Study of Yin and Shang Bronzes and Gold Texts", "The Ten Criticisms", "The Age of Slavery", "A Collection of Essays on Literature and History", "Collected Writings of Guo Moruo" (38 vols.), and so on.
Chronology of Events
Born on November 16, 1892, in Shawan Town, Leshan County, Sichuan Province, he was nicknamed Wenbao, No. Shangwu, and his school name was Kaizhen.
In the spring of 1897, he entered the family school. He studied the Classic of Poetry and the Three Hundred Poems of the Tang Dynasty, and loved Wang Wei, Meng Haoran, and Li Bai.
In 1901, the family school adopted the new textbooks compiled and printed in Shanghai.
In the spring of 1905, his eldest brother, Guo Kaiwen, went to Japan to study, and he intended to travel with him, but his parents did not allow him to do so.
In the spring of 1906, she was admitted to Leshan County Higher Elementary School. In the first semester, he was ranked first, but because of the jealousy of his older classmates, he was relegated to third place.
1907 Spring, because of his opposition to the authoritarianism of the teachers, he was expelled from the school, but returned to the school through the good offices. In the summer, he was enrolled in Leshan County High School, where he read a lot of Lin Qinnan's novels.
1908 Autumn Suffered from typhoid fever complicated by otitis media, and his hearing was damaged. During his illness, he read the ancient books of the pre-Qin and Qin philosophers, favoring Zhuangzi.
1909 Autumn Dismissed from school for participating in a strike and requesting the school and local government to hand over the perpetrator of an injury to a fellow student for punishment.
Spring 1910 In Chengdu, the provincial capital, he was enrolled in the Sichuan Government Higher Secondary School. winter to participate in the Chengdu school demand for early opening of the National Assembly strike, as a class representative, and was expelled from the punishment, for reasons not implemented 1911 winter the abdication of the Qing emperor. Returned to his hometown to organize a militia group to respond to the Xinhai Revolution.
1912, February by the order of his parents and Zhang Qionghua married, 5 days after leaving home to return to Chengdu.
In the spring of 1913, he was admitted to the Science Department of the Sichuan Government Higher School in Chengdu, but did not study.
In the spring of 1913, he was admitted to the Science Department of the Sichuan Higher Governmental School in Chengdu, but did not study there. At the end of the year, with the financial support of his elder brother, he decided to study in Japan.
In January 1914, he arrived in Tokyo. In the fall, he was admitted to the preparatory course of Tokyo First Higher School. He was a classmate of Yu Dafu.
1915 Autumn, entered Okayama Sixth Higher School. Classmates with Shing Fongo. Read Tagore, Turgenev, Goethe, and Heine, and came close to Spinoza.
In the summer of 1916, he met Tomiko Sato, a nurse at St. Luke's Hospital in Tokyo. In the winter, he married Sato Tomiko in Okayama. Begins writing new poems.
1917 Tries to translate Tagore's poems, but is unable to publish them. 1918 Participates in a strike by Japanese students against the signing of Article 21 of the Japanese Constitution. In summer, he was admitted to the Medical Faculty of Kyushu Imperial University. Started to publish a literary journal with his Japanese classmate Zhang Zhiping.
Summer 1919 Responds to the May Fourth Movement with Japanese students and organizes the Summer Society, a patriotic society for resisting Japan. Writes a novel, "Lamentations on Shepherds". His poems were published in Shanghai's New Current Affairs, which shook the Chinese poetry world.
1920 Correspondence with Tian Han and Zong Baihua is published as San Ye Jie. The first part of Goethe's Faust was translated, but was not published because the manuscript was chewed by rats.
1921 Took a break from school for half a year. Travels between Shanghai and Japan to prepare for the publication of a literary journal. June: Literary organization Creation Society founded in Tokyo. The first collection of poems, Goddess, is published.
1922 The quarterly magazine Creation was launched on May 1, 1922, with a translation of Goethe's The Young Werther. Translated Goethe's The Trouble with Young Werther.
Spring, 1923: Graduated from Kyushu Imperial University with a degree in medicine. Returns to Japan to engage in literary activities and edits and publishes the publications of the Creation Society. Translates the first half of Nietzsche's "Chalastrus Notes". Published a collection of poems, plays, and essays called "Starry Night".
Spring, 1924 Goes to Japan and translates Kawakami Shiu's Social Organization and Social Revolution and Turgenev's New Era in Fukuoka. He gained a systematic understanding of Marxist theory and established a Marxist worldview. Winter Returns to China to investigate the warlords in Jiangsu and Zhejiang. He writes "Below the Horizon".
1925 In Shanghai, he meets Qu Qiubai, an early leader of the Communist Party of China (CPC). He witnesses the tragic events of May 30th and writes the two-act play Nie Er. The Collected Works of Literature was published. Translates a collection of Irish plays by John Chinn's Lonely Hearts. Published the poem "The Bottle".
March 1926: Yu Dafu and others go to Guangzhou, where they become deans of the Faculty of Literature at Guangdong University and carry out reforms in the liberal arts. He became acquainted with Mao Zedong, Zhou Enlai and other ****producers. The Publication Department of the Creation Society was established. In July, he participated in the Northern Expedition and became deputy director and acting director of the General Political Department of the National Revolutionary Army.
In March 1927, Chiang Kai-shek was denounced as a traitor to the revolution in a speech he made at Zhu De's residence in Nanchang. Wanted by Chiang Kai-shek's government, he participated in the August 1 Nanchang Uprising and served as a member of the Presidium of the National Revolutionary Committee and Director of the General Political Department of the Uprising Forces. Introduced by Zhou Enlai and Li Yilu, he joined the Chinese Communist Party. Winter: Returned to Shanghai to engage in literary activities. Retranslated the first part of Faust. Because of typhus, he missed the opportunity to transfer to the Soviet Union by ship.
February, 1928: In order to avoid arrest by the Kuomintang government, he left Shanghai with the help of Uchiyama Wenzao and traveled to Japan under an alias, settling in Chiba Prefecture, where his movements were monitored by the police. He reads the pre-Qin history books in Tokyo's Tohan Bunko and researches ancient Chinese history. Translated American author Sinclair's novel "The Charcoal King".
1929 Writes autobiographies My Early Years and Before and After. Translated Sinclair's novel Slaughterhouse. Translated "History of Archaeological Discoveries of Fine Arts" by Mihailis of Germany.
1930 Publication of Studies on Ancient Chinese Society, which argued for the existence of slavery in ancient China. Translated Sinclair's novel Kerosene.
1931 The Study of Oracle Bone Characters, The Study of Yin and Zhou Bronze Inscriptions, and The Great Series of Two Weeks of Golden Writings were published. Translated Marx's Critique of Political Economy. Translated Tolstoy's War and Peace and Wales's The Science of Life.
In 1932, the "12-8" Incident occurred, "The Science of Life" and other translations were burned in Shanghai Commercial Press. He wrote Jinwen Congkao and Ten Years of Creation.
In 1933, he wrote "Divination and Rhetoric", "The Remainder of the Remainder of the Interpretation of the Golden Writings", and "Ancient Inscriptions", etc. He also wrote "The Science of Life", which was burned in Shanghai Commercial Press.
In 1934, he wrote The Examination and Interpretation of the Two Weeks' Jinwen Rhetoric, The Evolution of the Pre-Qin Concept of Heavenly Dao, and The Study of Qu Yuan. He then translated The Science of Life. Translated The Collection of Japanese Short Stories.
In 1936, he wrote several historical sketches, which were compiled into "Ragging Tellurium".
In 1936, he wrote several historical sketches, which he edited as "Rag-tellurium". Translated German Schiller's Wallenstein.
In 1937, he wrote "Yinqi ji zu jie" (A Compendium of Yinqi), and "zhuangdian zhi xian jie" (A Continuation of the Creation Decade). Returns to China to fight in the war against Japan. In Shanghai, he hosts the Salvation Daily, organizes a cultural propaganda team and a field service group to work at the front. As a non-partisan, he engages in anti-war cultural work under the direct leadership of Zhou Enlai.
January, 1938: Joined with Yu Liqun and went to Wuhan from Guangzhou to take up the post of Director of the Third Department of the Political Department of the Military Commission of the National Government. He was elected as a member of the All-China Literary and Artistic Association against the Enemy. October Wuhan was lost, through Changsha, Guilin evacuated to Chongqing.
In 1939, "Study of the Stone Drum Texts" was published.
April 1940: Excavation of a Han tomb on the north bank of the Jialing River in Chongqing in the fourth year of the Yanguang period. September: Resignation from the post of director of the Third Department in protest against the forced reorganization of the Political Department by the KMT government. November: The KMT authorities are forced to agree to the formation of a Cultural Working Committee, of which he is the director.
November 1941 Zhou Enlai, Yu Youren, Feng Yuxiang and other initiated to commemorate the 25th anniversary of Guo Moruo's creative life and 50th birthday. Compiled the Fifty-Year Compendium. Rewrites "Flowers of Tongdi".
In 1942, he wrote the historical dramas Qu Yuan, The Tiger's Talisman, Gao Jianli, and The Peacock's Guts; and translated Goethe's Herman and the Dog Green Moss. He founded the Qunyi Publishing House and edited the academic journal Zhongyuan.
1943 Wrote the historical drama Nan Guan Cao. Studied the pre-Qin sages.
In the spring of 1944, he wrote "The Sacrifice of the 300th Year of the Kashin Dynasty," which was designated by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) as a rectification and study document.
In 1945, he drafted "Advice on the Current Situation in the Cultural Sector," which called for a democratic political system. The Cultural Affairs Committee was then dissolved by the KMT government. The Bronze Age" and "Ten Criticisms" were published. Summer Leaves Chongqing and arrives in Shanghai. Goes to Nanjing to take part in the peace talks. Historical Figures" was published.
1947 Translated Goethe's Faust. He edited The Age of Youth, Revolutionary Spring and Autumn, and Heaven and Earth. Moved to Hong Kong in winter.
In 1948, he wrote Memoirs of the War of Resistance (later renamed Hongboqu). At the end of the year, he traveled to the liberated areas in the northeast to attend the New Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC).
In March 1949, he led a Chinese delegation to attend the Prague meeting of the World Congress for Peace. On the eve of the founding of the People's Republic of China, he was elected chairman of the All-China Federation of Literary and Art Workers and vice-chairman of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference. October The People's Republic of China was founded and he became Vice Premier of the State Council, Director of the Culture and Education Commission and President of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
1950 March Elected chairman of the China Folk Literature and Art Research Association. May: The Working Committee for the Unification of Academic Nomenclature was established and he became its director. August: He leads a Chinese delegation to North Korea; November: he attends the Second World Congress for the Defense of Peace in Warsaw.
1951 February: Attends the World Peace Council in Berlin; November: attends the World Peace Council in Vienna; December: receives the Stalin Prize for Strengthening International Peace. December 1951: Received the Stalin International Prize for the Strengthening of International Peace.
February 1952 The Age of Slavery was published, establishing that the lower limit of slavery was at the turn of the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period. Becomes director of the Central Archaeological Training Course. Awarded the title of Academician of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. Honorary Academician of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences.
March Attends the meeting of the Executive Board of the World Peace Council in Oslo.
July Attends a special session of the World Peace Council in Berlin.
October The Asian and Pacific Regional Peace Conference, initiated with Soong Ching Ling and Peng Zhen, is held in Beijing.
November Attends the World People's Congress for Peace in Vienna.
1953 Writes "Qu Yuan Fugu" (A Modern Translation of Qu Yuan's Fugu); in March, accompanies Zhou Enlai to the USSR and Czechoslovakia to offer condolences to Stalin and Gotthard; in May, attends the Standing Committee of the World Peace Council in Stockholm; in June, attends the meeting of the World Peace Council in Budapest. Elected President of the Chinese Federation of Literature for the second term. Receives the titles of Academician of the Polish Academy of Sciences and Honorary Academician of Bulgaria.
In 1954, he wrote the book "Guanzi ji xue" (The Collective Study of Guanzi). May: Attends a special meeting of the World Peace Council in Berlin. June: Attends the World Peace Council Conference on Easing the International Situation in Stockholm. Elected Vice Chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress.
January 1955 Attends the International Conference for World Peace in Vienna. April: Attends the International Conference for World Peace in New Delhi. June: Attends the International Conference for World Peace in Helsinki. June: Attends the International Conference for World Peace in Helsinki. Winter: Leads a Chinese scientific delegation to visit Japan and writes "Miscellaneous Songs on Visiting Japan".
1956 Becomes deputy director of the Scientific Planning Committee of the State Council, deputy director of the Central Committee for the Promotion of Putonghua, and director of the Committee for the Revision of Hanyu Pinyin Program.
1957 The 17-volume Collected Writings of Guo Moruo begins publication. June Attends the World Peace Council in Colombo
1958 September to June 1978 becomes the first president of the University of Science and Technology of China.
Died in Beijing on June 12, 1978, at the age of 86 years.
In English
Chinese scholar, one of the leading writers of 20th-century China, and an important government official.
The son of a After receiving a traditional education, in 1914 he abandoned his Chinese wife of an arranged marriage and went to Japan. After receiving a traditional education, in 1914 he abandoned his Chinese wife of an arranged marriage and went to Japan to study medicine. There he fell in love with a Japanese woman who became his common-law wife. He began to devote himself to the study of foreign languages and literature, reading Spinoza, Goethe, the Bengali poet Tagore, and Walt Whitman. His own early poetry was highly emotional free verse reminiscent of his own poetry. highly emotional free verse reminiscent of Whitman and Shelley. His translation of Goethe's Sorrows of Young Werther gained enormous popularity among Chinese youth soon after its appearance in 1919. His translation of Goethe's Sorrows of Young Werther gained enormous popularity among Chinese youth soon after its appearance in 1922. Two years later, Guo's translation of Social Organization and Social Revolution, by the Japanese Two years later, Guo's translation of Social Organization and Social Revolution, by the Japanese Marxist Kawakami Hajime, greatly influenced his own thought, and he became an adherent of Marxism. Although his writing, even his prose, was still marked by Romantic moods, he declared a rejection of individualistic literature, calling for a "socialist literature that is sympathetic toward the proletariat. . . ."
In 1926 he acted as a political commissar in the Northern Expedition, in which Chiang Kai-shek attempted to crush the warlords and unify China. But when Chiang purged the Communists, he was still marked by Romantic moods. When Chiang purged the Communists from his Kuomintang (Nationalist Party) in 1927, Guo participated in the Communist Nan-ch'ang uprising. After its failure he fled to Japan, where for 10 years he pursued scholarly research on Chinese antiquities. In 1937 he returned to China to take part in the resistance against Japan and was given important government responsibilities. In 1937 he returned to China to take part in the resistance against Japan and was given important government posts.
As a writer, Guo was enormously prolific in every genre.
As a writer, Guo was enormously prolific in every genre. Besides his poetry and fiction, his works include plays, nine autobiographical volumes, and numerous translations of the works of Goethe, Schiller, Turgenev, Tolstoy, Upton Sinclair, and Besides his poetry and fiction, his works include plays, nine autobiographical volumes, and numerous translations of the works of Goethe, Schiller, Turgenev, Tolstoy, Upton Sinclair, and other Western authors. He also produced historical and philosophical treatises, including his monumental study of inscriptions on oracle bones and bronze vessels, Liang Chou chin wen tz'u ta hsi t'u lu k'ao shih (1935, new ed. 1957; "Corpus of Inscriptions on Bronzes from the Two Chou Dynasties. the Two Chou Dynasties"). In this work he attempts to demonstrate, according to Communist doctrine, the "slave society" nature of ancient China.
< p>After 1949 Guo held many important positions in the People's Republic of China, including the presidency of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. In 1966 he was one of the first to be attacked for his role as a member of the Chinese Communist Party. In 1966 he was one of the first to be attacked in the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution. He confessed that he had failed to understand properly the thought of Mao Zedong and that all his work had been done in the name of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. He confessed that he had failed to understand properly the thought of Mao Zedong and that all his work should be burned. Strangely, however, Guo was not, as were many of his colleagues, stripped of all official positions; by the early 1970s he again enjoyed a position of responsibility. early 1970s he again enjoyed a position of greatGuo Moruo's former residence
Guo Moruo's former residence is located in Sichuan Leshan City, 35 kilometers east of the Shawan field street. Seated north to south, back Suishan (i.e., the second peak of Moth Eyebrow Mountain), facing the water (i.e., Dadu River), is a three Chinese-style wooden structure of a small courtyard and a small back garden. The left test room of the first courtyard is the birthplace of Guo Moruo. The right room in the center courtyard is Guo Moruo's new room when he "got married and suffered"; the backyard is adjacent to the small garden, there is a room facing the Suishan Hall, that is, Guo Moruo was four and a half years old, "Suishan Hall" home school. Early years of the "village scene", "get up early", "the fourth day of the first month of Rongtiangang tomb sweeping on the way to meet the rain oral occupation of a law" and other poems, that is, written in this. The old house was in a state of disrepair and was in a state of disrepair. In recent years, after repair and restoration of the original appearance, on November 16, 1981, the ninetieth anniversary of Guo's birth was on public display.
Shawan is the birthplace of contemporary great writer Guo Moruo, Guo spent his childhood here, leaving behind a lot of precious relics and historical sites: has a long history, splendid culture and rich natural resources. Shawan, "Suishan Yuxiu, foam water bell spirit", which is exactly the words of praise for the generations of literati Shawan. Across the cleanliness of the bay city north and south of the old street in the middle, a set of west to east of the four through the bucket wooden structure bungalows, which is the reputation of Guo Moruo's former residence. The former residence in front of the foam water, according to Suishan, founded in the Qing Dynasty during the Jiaqing period, after the gradual expansion, to Guo Moruo father Guo Chaopei management of the family business, to reach the current scale, *** there are 36 large and small rooms. Today, it still maintains its ancient and simple appearance. Guo Moruo's early poems "Early Rising", "Tea Stream", "Village Scene" and so on were made here. Guo Moruo Residence Museum is located behind the wall of the old residence, covers an area of 3.35 acres, for a floor and a bottom of the triple courtyard antique-style building, pavilions and platforms connected to the corridors connected to the bamboo trees and trees, the pool water rippling, exotic flowers and grasses, the fragrance of the burst. Museum display hall, Guo Lao's writings, related cultural relics and biographical information and photos, a cabinet, a frame, a picture, a piece of sequential display in front of visitors, people respect.