When talking about these two words, Mr. Zong Rao wrote two comments. He said these two words, meaning "give everything I have to help the old minister" ("Words on Earth"). "Do one's best" comes from Zhuge Liang's "Teacher's Watch", saying "Do one's best and die". Bowing is my body.
Shows the arms of the old minister. What is the old minister's arms like? It was Du Fu who wrote Zhuge Liang's "Three Summons to State Affairs, and the Second Generation to Sincerity" (The Book of Letters). He said Zhuge Liang assisted Liu Bei in founding the country, but when Liu Chan's country was in urgent need, he wanted to revive it and launched it several times. This is "and two generations, he gave him a real heart." He said that Feng's poems "often fall ill before flowers, and don't care about being thin in the mirror" were written with heart.
Extended data:
Feng Yansi (903-960), also known as Yan Ji and Yan Si, was born in Jiangdufu (now Yangzhou City, Jiangsu Province) in the Five Dynasties and was a famous poet and minister in the Southern Tang Dynasty during the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period. He was an official of the Southern Tang Dynasty, the ancestor of martyrs and the leader of two dynasties. He entered the phase three times, and the official was the Prince Taifu, who died of loyalty. Most of his poems are leisurely, with a strong sense of literati, which had a great influence on poets in the early Northern Song Dynasty.
When the Southern Tang Dynasty was founded, because of his versatility, Li Bian, a martyr of the Southern Tang Dynasty, appointed him as the secretary lang and asked him to make friends with Prince Li Jing. Later, Excavate was appointed Marshal, and Feng Yansi was the secretary of Marshal's Office.
Feng Yansi's ci collection is called Yangchun Lu, among which Yangchun Ji was handed down from the Northern Song Dynasty, and the books in the Song Dynasty have long been lost. The earliest existing book is Amin Wu Ne's Hundred Poems by Celebrities in Tang and Song Dynasties, and there are many in Qing Dynasty. However, the characters collected in each book are different, and some of them also contain forgeries. The Five Pronouns of the Whole Tang Dynasty, edited by Zeng,, and Liu Zunming, published by Zhonghua Book Company 1999, contains12 Feng Yansi words.