& lt Title Sanyi Tower > Merging Order and Postscript
China Sanyi Pagoda and Shanghai Zhabei Sanyi Buried Pigeon Pagoda were built by Japanese farmers.
Whether to fly to destroy the son of man, the well was destroyed, leaving only hungry pigeons.
I left the fire house with a great heart, and finally I left the tower to Miss Yingzhou.
A fine bird still dreams of holding a stone, and a fighter is determined to fight against the current.
The wave-snatching brothers are here, and when they meet, they laugh and forget the enmity.
Dr. Nishimura lost his pigeon after the Shanghai War. He kept it all the time. At first it was peaceful, but in the end it left. Build a tower to hide, levy a title to chant, average the rate, and talk about distant feelings.
Sanyi Pagoda is built to commemorate the rescued pigeon in Sanyili, Zhabei, China, and to bury its remains.
This tower was built in Japan by local peace-loving farmers.
Japanese robbers bombed Zhabei people in Shanghai, and hungry pigeons survived in the ruins.
I happened to meet a kind Japanese friend and brought this robbed owl back to Japan.
When the dove died, a tower was built to commemorate it, and Japanese farmers often kept it in mind.
If a dead pigeon wakes up from a dream, it will turn into a bird to fill the stone in the East China Sea.
Destroy the seeds of hatred sown by war, and the Chinese and Japanese people will unite on the same enemy.
Dr. Makoto Nishimura rescued a pigeon that lost its home after the war in Shanghai and brought it back to Japan to feed it. It was fine at first, but the pigeon finally died. So he built a grave for pigeons and buried bones, and asked for poems for the completion of the grave, so he scribbled down these seven methods just to express his deep friendship.
During the Japanese invasion of China, Dr. Makoto Nishimura, a Japanese biologist, went to China to rescue the war wounded in February 1932 as the "Chief Service Officer".
Pigeons were found in the ruins of Sanyili, a suburb of Shanghai, unable to fly because of hunger. They were brought back to Japan, named Sanyi and carefully fed.
In order to express the friendship between the two peoples, he "looks forward to giving birth to a little pigeon and sending it back to Shanghai as a symbol of Japan-China friendship". Unfortunately, this pigeon brought back to Japan was later attacked and killed by a weasel, and the doctor and the people around him decided to bury it in the grave.
Out of admiration for Mr. Lu Xun, Dr. Nishimura wrote a letter explaining the reasons in detail, and gave the pigeons he painted to Lu Xun in Shanghai, expressing the wish of Sino-Japanese friendship.
The author Lu Xun wrote this poem on June 2 1, 1933.