Zhou Wenwang 1
It is recorded in Historical Records that Confucius, with a dream of music, learned the piano from Xiangzi and Zhou Wenwang's music. Halfway through the study, Confucius said that he admired Zhou Wenwang very much: "... eyes are like sheep, like the Four Kingdoms, and no one can do it!" The "eyes like sheep" here was later explained in Interpretation of Names: looking at the sheep means "looking at the vast distance", which means that you can't see clearly from a distance.
2. Ouyang Xiu
Ouyang Xiu, one of the eight masters in Tang and Song Dynasties, was also nearsighted and highly nearsighted. Ye Mengde in the Southern Song Dynasty recorded in "Shi Lin Yan Hua" that Ouyang Xiu, a great writer, was very inconvenient to read after he was nearsighted, so he let his attendants take him to stand by and read to him.
3. Bai Juyi
He wrote "Poems of Two Eye Diseases", including such a poem: "A thousand pieces of snow are scattered in the air, and a heavy yarn is put on the cage. It's like watching fog on a sunny day, not blooming in spring. " Very vividly expressed the blurred vision of myopia.
At the same time, he also expressed his regret that he didn't know how to protect his eyes when he was young: "I was tired of studying hard in my early years and cried a lot in my later years." I don't know what to do if my eyes are damaged. How to realize my wish when I am sick? At first glance, the night is like a lamp, and the mirror does not grind. No amount of medicine can cure it, but you should close your eyes and learn from Buddhism. "If you don't protect your eyes when you are young, you can only secretly regret it when you are old.
4. Ji Xiaolan
It is well known that Ji Xiaolan is eloquent and well-read. In fact, Ji Yun said in Historical Records that "it is short-sighted to look at it". He is not only ugly, but also nearsighted.
5. Yongzheng
Yong Zhengdi in Qing Dynasty was not only nearsighted, but also a glasses fanatic. According to historical records, the manufacturing institute specially produced 35 pairs of glasses for Yong Zhengdi, which are made of different materials, including crystal, tea crystal, ink crystal and glass.