When workers and overseas Chinese returned to China, painters were asked to draw broken lines on the piano, and calligraphers were asked to carve ancient Chinese characters on the piano. Then, they put it in a box and buried it in the soil. A year later, workers and overseas Chinese dug the piano out of the ground, opened the lid and saw that it was covered with tái and moldy spots. Overseas Chinese workers took the piano to the market for sale. A rich man paid a high price for it and presented it as a treasure to the music officer of the imperial court. The musicians opened the box, nodding their heads like chickens pecking at rice, and repeatedly praised: "Good piano, good piano, this is an authentic clavichord, which is really a rare treasure in the world!"
When dealing with musicians and musicians who blindly worship antiques, overseas Chinese workers take the method of fighting poison with poison, exposing their roots and making a fool of themselves-it turns out that their kindness is blind. In real life, there are also people who blindly worship foreign things, blindly imitate antiques, and only look at the surface without looking at the essence. This fable can serve as a mirror for them.