Stay ahead and hit a number.

Hold the tap, hold the rafters. One number is four.

The Chinese version of Miscellanies of Xijing, Volume III:' The Yangtze River is a cloud of good deeds, always pregnant with lead, and it is the language of visiting all directions from various officials.' Lead, lead powder; Bamboo slips. All writing utensils. Later, he took "holding the first position and holding the rafters" as an allusion to diligent writing and diligent school.

Interpretation by reference:

It is also stored as "holding a raft" and "holding lead". The language book "Xijing Miscellanies" Volume III: "The Yangtze River is a good thing, and it is often pregnant with lead. From the officials, their words of visiting the Quartet. "

Feng Guifen's Suzhou Trial Court in the Qing Dynasty: "In the early Yuan Dynasty, Suzhou was demarcated, and Pyeongchang, Town, Lake and Jiazhu counties were cut again. Thousands of miles away, those who carried the rafters were scattered on all sides."

Qing Zeng Guofan's Preface to Sun Zhifang's Lectures: "There are so many things in the world that we can't hold on to rafters. It's not everything, but our teeth are solid."

Kuang Zhouyi's "Hui Feng Ci Hua Continued" Volume 1: "I'm a little tired every day, when I proofread my ancestors' suicide notes, and it's time to quote them. "

Idiom explanation:

Explain lead and lead powder; Bamboo slips. All writing utensils. Later, it was used as an allusion to diligent writing and proofreading. The source language is "Xijing Miscellanies" Volume III: "The Yangtze River is a good thing, and it is often pregnant with lead. From the officials, their words of visiting the Quartet. "

Introduction to the work:

Miscellanies of Xijing is a collection of ancient historical notes and novels. Liu Xin in the Han Dynasty and Ge Hong in the Eastern Jin Dynasty. Among them, "Xijing" refers to Chang 'an, the capital of the Western Han Dynasty. It is a miscellaneous history of the Western Han Dynasty, with both history and many anecdotes of the Western Han Dynasty. Among them, "Zhao Jun went to the fortress" and "Zhuo Wenjun eloped to Sima Xiangru" are well-known stories.

Many interesting stories are published for the first time in this book, and they are allusions of later generations. There is also an idiom, "Digging a wall to borrow a lamp", which is also spread from the story of Kuang Heng in the book.

This book was accused of being a fake book in past dynasties, but from the tone and content, it was copied from the lost history of Han, Wei and Six Dynasties. The story of the Western Han Dynasty is absurd and unreliable. Zhao Tuo of South Vietnam presented a treasure to the Han Dynasty, the deeds of the painter of the Han Palace before and after Zhaojun's departure from the fortress.

Liu Bang built Xinfeng to welcome the squire, the Han custom was not born on May 5, and he got a bronze coin from Shushan. Yuan Guanghan, a rich man in Maoling, complained that Sima Qian died in prison and wrote Hanshu, which can broaden his mind and have a long history of research. The ancient novel series of Zhonghua Book Company is better.