Interpretation of bosom friend songs

Original poem

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Zhong Ni didn't mean it at first, and Mencius couldn't help being tempted.

Don't look for white jade in the mountains, but take gold with you.

White jade is sometimes found in the mountains, but gold is nowhere to be found.

Anyone in my generation dares to say yes, knowing that there is no confidant in the world. [ 1]

Brief introduction of the author

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Shao Yong (1011-1077) was a philosopher and Yi-ology scholar in the Northern Song Dynasty. Fu Yao, born in Kang Jie, posthumous title, whose real names are Mr. An Le and Mr. Yichuan Weng, was later called Mr. Bai Yuan, a native of Fanyang (now Zhuozhou City, Hebei Province), and moved to * * * City (now Huixian County, Henan Province) with his father. Not so ambitious, studying the source of Sumen Mountain. In the first year of Injong (1049), he settled in Luoyang and taught apprentices for a living. Renzong Jiayou and Zongshen Xining were called to be officials, but neither of them went. He created "innate learning" and thought that everything evolved from "Tai Chi". He is the author of Guanwu, Congenital Map, Yichuan Crushing Collection, Yellow History and so on. [2]

reference data

1. (Song) Shao Yong; Guo Yu, proofreading by Yu Tianbao, and the complete works of Shao Yong, in Destroyed Yichuan, Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, 20 15.09, pp. 335-336.

2. Zhang Xianjun, Zhao Yi. A concise dictionary of Chinese and foreign literary theories: Bashu Bookstore, 20 15.06: p. 86.