Briefly introduce the story of the Goddess Chang'e flying to the moon in 70 words.

A long time ago, Yi went hunting in the mountains and met Chang 'e under a laurel tree. They got married through the laurel tree. In the era of Emperor Yao, ten suns appeared in the sky, burning crops and baking vegetation, and the people had no food. At the same time, anger, gnashing of teeth, nine babies, strong wind, seal. After shooting for ten days, she killed the snake, beheaded the snake in Dongting and caught the seal in Sanglin. All the people were very happy and worshipped Yao as the son of heaven. Later, she got the elixir from the Queen Mother of the West and gave it to Chang 'e for safekeeping.

When Feng Meng heard about it, he stole it, but if it didn't work, he would do harm. In desperation, Chang 'e swallowed the elixir of life and flew to the sky. Because she couldn't bear to leave Iraq, Chang 'e stayed in Guanghan Palace. Lonely and unbearable, Guanghan Palace urged WU GANG to cut down the osmanthus tree and let Yutu pound medicine, hoping to make it a soaring medicine, so that she could return to the world as soon as possible and reunite with Iraq. When Yi heard the news of the Goddess Chang'e flying to the moon,

Extended data:

Mythological figure

Chang 'e is the moon fairy in China mythology. In Shan Hai Jing, Hou Yi and the wife of the Emperor of Heaven in the Middle Ages were called Heng E (Heng E) because of her extraordinary beauty. In the Western Han Dynasty, in order to avoid Liu Heng, Chang 'e was changed to Chang 'e, and some people called it Chun Hu.

In myth, Di Jun lived in the Guanghan Palace above the moon because he took the elixir of life from the Queen Mother of the West.

Before the Eastern Han Dynasty, there was no data to show that Chang 'e and Jun were husband and wife, and Guizang explained that they might be husband and wife by comparing divinatory symbols. In some folklore, Chang 'e and Xing Jun, the goddess of the Moon in Taoist mythology, are combined into one, and are honored as Yuan Jun of the Moon Palace after Huang Huasu's net victory in Yao Yuan, or Huang Junxiao and Wang Ming of the Moon Palace, which are female images.

Another view is that:

There is a saying in Lu's Spring and Autumn Annals that don't bow your head. Dai Biyuan commented: "Shang Yang is Chang Yi, and the ancient reading of' Yi' is' He', and later generations have Chang 'e's speaking out of turn. In other words, the prototype of Chang 'e is Chang 'e recorded in Shan Hai Jing Huang Da Xi Jing.

However, this view obviously fails to take into account that the real name of Chang 'e recorded in ancient books in the early Warring States period is "Heng 'e" (whether it is the same person is controversial), and it was not until the Han Dynasty that it was changed to Chang 'e because of taboos.