Attached car's life: in the second year of Kangxi (1663), he took the Huguang township examination with his younger brother Wan Bei, and in the third year of Kangxi (1664), 84 scholars in the top three were selected, and the museum was transferred to the Ministry of Accounts, and the Ministry of Military Affairs personally printed it. It is said that he "remonstrated with the wall for more than 20 years and refused to ask for advice for a long time, so he should be cautious." Upright and upright, the sound shocked the world, honest and clean, knowledgeable, good at calligraphy, with the richest pen and ink in the Ming Dynasty.
Main works: Revelation of Rhythm, Poems Collected by Huaiyuan, Ten Volumes of Stone Carvings of Yinghaotang in Ming Dynasty, Notes on the Exchanges between Monarchs and Ministers in Past Dynasties, etc.
The book "Enlightenment of Rhythm" is an enlightening reading for training children to cope with and master rhythm. According to rhyme, it includes astronomy, geography, flowers and trees, birds and beasts, figures and artifacts. From single word pairs to double word pairs, three word pairs, five word pairs, seven word pairs to eleven word pairs, phonology is harmonious and catchy, from which pronunciation, vocabulary and rhetoric training are obtained. From single words to multiple words, it reads like singing. Compared with other three-character and four-sentence structures, it is more attractive. This kind of reading is unique and enduring in the enlightenment reading. Since the Ming and Qing Dynasties, books such as Dream-seeking Parallel Sentences and Liweng Duiyun have been written in this way and have been widely circulated.
Poetry couplets are an important literary form in ancient China. They have been handed down from generation to generation for more than 2,000 years and still have strong vitality. In ancient times, the cultivation of this kind of literary accomplishment began from childhood in private schools, and there were strict requirements for tone, temperament and meter. Therefore, some works on temperament came into being, among which the Enlightenment of Temperament by Che in the Kangxi period of Qing Dynasty was a representative one.
Today, we use the version of Mo Gengtang collected by Wei Chaojun in Chengdu during the reign of Emperor Guangxu of Qing Dynasty, about 1883. Its cover title is "Melody Enlightenment" and its inner page title is "Melody Enlightenment Summary". The author's topics are Nie Ximin's The Peak of Hengshan Mountain, Che's The Two Pavilions in Shaoling and Revision of Notes on Fengjiang in Xiangtan Xiadaguan. Since this book is called Summary, naturally it will only extract the most important part of the rhythm enlightenment. Divided into two volumes, there are only 30 rhymes (that is, the rhymes used by most metrical poems). Obviously, this is a summary of the first two volumes written by Zhu Ming, and on this basis, some modifications and revisions are made as the author thinks necessary.