Du: A scholar named Du.
Bao: It's a verb, treasure.
Bao: Bao, here refers to painting the cover. Painting with colorful brocade as the bag and jade as the axis.
Exposure: air drying and drying.
Chug: convulsion, contraction.
Descent: wag your tail. Put it down, shake, shake.
Ran: Think? That's right.
Treasure: a treasured painting.
Dai Song: A painter in the Tang Dynasty.
Jin Xiangyu axis: Take jade as the axis and put it into a kit.
Clap your hands.
Extended data;
Original text;
There is Du in Shu, with excellent calligraphy and painting. There is also Dai Song's "Bull" Axis, which is particularly popular. It is covered with precious stones, and it is often followed by itself.
One day when the calligraphy and painting were exposed, a shepherd boy saw it, clapped his hands and laughed, saying, "This painting is also a bullfight. In a bull fight, the force is in a dead corner, and the tail is sandwiched between two stocks. It is wrong to fight now with your tail between your legs. " Chu Shi laughed it off. There is an old saying: "Ask slaves for farming and maids for weaving." Can't be changed.
Translation;
There is a hermit named Du in Sichuan who likes painting and calligraphy. There are hundreds of paintings and calligraphy works in his collection, including Dai Song's Niu Yi, which he particularly likes. He kept them in a tool kit, used jade as a painting axis, and often carried them with him.
One day, when a shepherd boy was drying calligraphy and painting, he saw this painting, clapped his hands and said with a smile, "This painting depicts a fighting cow. When a cow fights, its strength is concentrated on the corner, and its tail is sandwiched between its two hind legs, but this painting is painted as a cow wagging its tail and hitting the corner, which is wrong! " The hermit smiled and thought the shepherd boy was right.
There is an old saying: "Ask the farmers who grow crops when planting land, and ask the handmaids who spin and weave when weaving." This sentence is immutable.
Painting Cow Dai Song is an essay written by Su Shi, a writer in the Northern Song Dynasty. It tells a story in a simple way, and satirizes authoritative professionals who don't work according to the actual situation out of thin air.