Li Bai was rescued by Guo Ziyi.
Guo Ziyi (697-July 9, 781), courtesy name Ziyi, was a native of Zheng County, Huazhou (now Huazhou District, Weinan, Shaanxi Province). A famous general, politician, and military strategist in the Tang Dynasty, he was the son of Guo Jingzhi, the governor of Shouzhou.
Born from the Guo family in Taiyuan. In his early years, he gained a high rank in the martial arts and joined the army, and accumulated meritorious service until he became the prefect of Jiuyuan. When the Anshi Rebellion broke out, he was appointed the military governor of Shuofang and led the army to recover Hebei and Hedong. He paid homage to the Minister of War and Tong Zhongshu and made peace with him. In the second year of Zhide (757), he made great achievements in regaining the two capitals, and added Situ and Dai Guogong. He was also promoted to Zhongshu Ling. In the second year of Qianyuan (759), he was responsible for the defeat of Xiangzhou, lost his military power, and became an idle official. In the first year of Baoying (762), he made great achievements in quelling the mutiny in Hezhong and was granted the title of King of Fenyang County.
Basic information about Li Bai:
Li Bai (February 28, 701-December 762), courtesy name Taibai and Qinglian Jushi, was born in Chengji, Longxi (now Qin, Gansu Province). An County), born in Changlong County, Mianzhou, Shu County (some say he was born in Suiye, Western Regions). The great romantic poet of the Tang Dynasty, the ninth grandson of Li Hao, King Wuzhao of Liang.
He is cheerful and generous, willing to make friends, loves drinking and writing poems, and is ranked among the "Eight Immortals of Wine". He was once appreciated by Li Longji, Emperor Xuanzong of the Tang Dynasty, and served as a bachelor of the Hanlin Academy. He was given money and returned it, traveled around the country, and married the granddaughters of prime ministers Xu Yushi and Zong Chuke. After Suzong of the Tang Dynasty came to the throne, he was involved in the Yongwang Rebellion, exiled Yelang, and moved to the home of Li Yangbing, the magistrate of Dangtu County. In the second year of Shangyuan Dynasty, he died at the age of sixty-two.
He is the author of "The Collection of Li Taibai", and his representative works include "Looking at the Lushan Waterfall", "The Difficult Journey", "The Difficult Road to Shu", "About Wine", "Early Departure from Baidi City", etc. Li Bai's poems and poems enjoy a very high status in terms of their pioneering significance and artistic achievements. Later generations were known as the "Immortal of Poetry" and were called "Li Du" together with the poet Du Fu.
The above content refers to Baidu Encyclopedia-Li Bai