A line of egrets soars into the sky-digressing from Wan Li.
Namely: "two orioles sing green willows, and a row of egrets go up to the sky." The idiom is-I don't know what to say, digress from Wan Li.
2. Written by Zhu Zhishan.
Words one day, the county grandfather invited Zhu Zhishan to the county government and showed Zhu Zhishan an article written by his son. Zhu Zhishan can't refuse. He read carefully and wrote two Tang poems: two orioles singing green willows and a row of egrets flying into the sky. There is a small print next to it: typing two idioms is a comment. After that, Zhu Zhishan left.
After reading Zhu Zhishan's evaluation, the touts praised him one after another: the last sentence, two orioles sing green willows, which means that the article is well written; Next, the egret goes to heaven, which means that the future of the son is bright. County grandfather beamed.
When Zhu Zhishan's friends learned about this, they visited Zhu Zhishan's home and asked Zhu Zhishan's original intention. Zhu Zhishan said eight words, which is exactly the opposite of what touts understood.
3. Introduction to Zhu Zhishan:
Zhu Yunming (1460- 1526), whose real name is Xizhe, was named Shan Zhi because a branch in his right hand gave birth to a finger. Known as "Zhu Jingzhao" in the world, he was born in Changzhou (now Wuxian County, Jiangsu Province) and was brilliant since he was a child. Hongzhi recommended it for five years (1429), but it didn't take long. Zheng Dejiu (15 14) was appointed as the magistrate of Xingning County, Guangdong Province. In the first year of Jiajing (1522), he was transferred to Yingtian (now Nanjing) as a general, and soon recovered from illness and returned to China.
Zhu Yunming is good at poetry, especially calligraphy. He is famous at home and abroad, and is congenial to Tang Yin. With Tang Yin, Wen Zhiming and Xu Zhenqing, they are also called "four gifted scholars in Wuzhong". Together with Wen Zhiming and Wang Chong, he was a representative of calligraphers in the mid-Ming Dynasty. In his early years, he used regular script carefully, studied under Zhao Mengfu and Chu Suiliang, and followed the "two kings" of Europe and Japan. Li Yong, Huang Tingjian and Mi Fei, cursive calligraphers, have profound skills, especially in their later years.
"Ming Shan Cang" says: "It is the first in the country to allow Shu Ming to enter and leave the Jin and Wei Dynasties."
Zhu Hegang's "New Interpretation of Linchi" in Qing Dynasty said: "I wish Jingzhao grass the right army, but it shows its anger at times; The grass is pure and harmonious, dense and rich, which matches the Duke of Chu. "
His representative works include Taihu Lake Poetry, Spring Festival Poetry and Red Wall Poetry. His works Liu Ti Shi Fu Juan, Du Fu Cao Shu Juan, Nineteen Ancient Poems, Tang Cao Shu Juan and Han Cao Shu Juan were handed down from generation to generation in Mo Bao.