Ruan Ji was a writer and thinker in the Three Kingdoms Wei Dynasty. Word heir, Liu Chenwei (now Henan) people. His father Ruan Yu is one of the seven famous sons of Jian 'an. At that time, he and Ji Kang were called one of the seven sages of bamboo forest.
Ruan Ji despises etiquette and tastes people who look at manners and customs with supercilious eyes; In the later period, he became a "man who didn't hide anything". In the complicated political struggle at that time, he often saved himself by drunkenness.
In the first year of Jiaping (AD 249), Sima Yi killed Cao Shuang, specializing in state affairs. After his death, his sons Sima Shi and Si Mazhao successively took power. In the sixth year of Jiaping (AD 254), Sima Shi abolished Wei Dibing and established Cao Taizu. In the year of Ganlu (AD 260), Si Mazhao killed Cao Mao and established Cao Huan. After his death, his son Sima Yan proclaimed himself emperor on behalf of Wei and established the Jin Dynasty. Ruan Ji is in the political whirlpool of fierce struggle between Sima Shi and Cao Shi. In order to save himself, he had to be careful, empty and deal with it.
For example, Mr. Cao told him not to join the army. When he saw that Cao Shi was facing the crisis of collapse, he refused because of illness and returned to the field to live in seclusion. After Sima Yi mastered the Cao Wei regime, he was immediately invited to the shogunate to engage in corps commander. He was awed by Sima's influence and had to bow his head and surrender. Whenever Sima's family has a banquet, he will come every time he is invited. When he arrives, he will drink, sometimes he is really drunk, and sometimes he pretends to be drunk to hide himself.
One year, he heard that there was a lack of an infantry captain, and there was a lot of wine in the infantry battalion. The campers were good at brewing good wine, so he asked to be a captain there. Being a captain, soaking in wine all day, indulging in drinking, doesn't care about the world at all. Later people called him Ruan Infantry.
Zhong Hui was an official in Si Tuleideng's time and an important counselor in Si Mazhao. This man is an opportunistic scumbag, and Ruan Ji has always hated it. He often comes to Ruan Ji's writers to learn about Ruan's real situation. Ruan treated each other with wine, drank heartily, and didn't talk about politics, so Zhong Hui had to go home disgruntled.
Ruan has a beautiful daughter who wants to be her daughter-in-law. She asked the matchmaker to come to her house several times to propose marriage. Ruan is in a dilemma. If you agree, it will damage your reputation and end up with a bad reputation of being attached to powerful people; If you don't promise, you will offend Si Mazhao and worry about your life. So I was drunk every day. When the suitor came, I saw him drunk and unconscious. In this way, he remained awake for more than 60 days. Si Mazhao had no choice but to give up the marriage.
Ruan Ji is a heavy drinker, unrestrained and contemptuous of etiquette. For example, a year after his mother's new funeral, he ate meat and drank wine with King Wen of Jin as usual. He Zeng, a clerk sitting next to him, couldn't bear to look at the past and said, "Your Majesty rules the world with filial piety, while Ruan Ji is very filial and eats meat and drinks with your Majesty. This is harmful and enlightening. " Ruan listened, eating and drinking by himself, laughing like a cucumber.
What's more, a neighbor of Ruan's family has a beautiful woman who started selling wine. He and his friends often go there to buy wine to drink. When he was drunk, he slept next to Bell. Belle's husband began to doubt Ruan, observed it, and saw that Ruan had no abnormal behavior before he was relieved.
Works: http://218.24.233.167: 8000/resource/book/edu/jxcks/ts01024/0065438 _ ts066.
Ruan Ji's book Jing Ji Zhi contains ten volumes of Ruan Ji Ji Ji Ji, a captain of Wei Infantry. The original note: Liang has thirteen volumes and one volume. Ruan Ji Ji Ji Ji consists of five volumes, which are the records of two Tang dynasties. Japanese Bibliography in Tang Dynasty: Ruan Sizong's Collection, five volumes. And ten volumes of Ruan Infantry Collection. So there were two kinds of books in the Tang Dynasty: five-volume books and ten-volume books. The bibliography of Song Dynasty is mostly ten volumes. However, there are ten volumes of Ruan Infantry and four volumes of Ruan Infantry. There is not much disparity with the Sui and Tang Dynasties. In the Ming Dynasty, there were ten volumes of Yellow Province and one volume of Zhang Pu, the contents of which were roughly the same. There are 13 four-character poems in Yong Huai that Qian Ceng saw. Ding visited the maritime book collectors, but none of them had Zhu Xi's poems. There are only three four-character poems in his Poems of the Three Kingdoms, which is no different from the current version. Huang Jie is an annotated version of Poems of Love. Thirteen poems of "Four Words of Yong Huai" were found in Pan Guiben in Ming Dynasty, among which one to three poems were the same as Ding Shu's, and four to thirteen poems were not found in Shiding. Huang recorded it and annotated it. Only then did it reappear in front of the world. According to Yun Naiming's Jiajing Ben, Pan Guiben, based on it, is preceded by Chen Xu of Jiajing Guimao and Pan Gui Xu of Chongzhen Dingchou, which are divided into two volumes. After Huang's death, the book also disappeared. Later, Comrade Kuaiqinli rewrote Wei's poems, which were recorded according to Pan Ben of the Yellow School. Huang wrote in 1920 and Lu wrote in 1964. Less than half a century ago, ancient books were still being snapped up, which is also very surprising.