Bandit gentleman: a gentleman with literary talent. Bandits know "fees" and have literary talent.
Cutting, grinding, chipping and grinding are the basic techniques for processing jade, stone, bone and ivory in ancient times.
The so-called jade is not cut, the iron pestle is ground into a needle, and it is tempered into steel. It is all sublimated through material refining, such as the importance of self-cultivation. Here, "incisive and polished" is to describe the knowledge, morality, etiquette, words and deeds of this talented gentleman, which is so profound, so elegant and so respectful, just like "jade articles that have been studied and pondered".
"There are bandits and gentlemen, such as cutting, cutting and grinding" comes from Guo Fengwei Feng Ao in The Book of Songs.
The original text is as follows:
Looking forward to the Olympics, bamboo is embarrassed. There are bandits and gentlemen, such as cutting as grinding.
She's embarrassed. She's embarrassed. There are bandits and gentlemen, so you can't be embarrassed.
Looking forward to the Olympics, green bamboo. There are bandits, gentlemen. They will be as good as stars.
She's embarrassed. She's embarrassed. There are bandits and gentlemen, so you can't be embarrassed.
Looking forward to the Olympics, green bamboo is like a basket. There are bandits, such as gold, tin, jade, jade.
Wide and wide, heavy and heavy. Be good at joking, not abusing.
The whole poem praises a modest gentleman, from the cultivation of "as sharp as a probe and as polished as a mill" to the sublimation of "as precious as gold and as precious as jade".
Extended data:
Guo Fengwei Fengqiao is a poem praising the male image in The Book of Songs, a collection of ancient realistic poems by China. The whole poem consists of three chapters, each with nine sentences. The poem uses the method of borrowing things to interest people, and each chapter is inspired by "green bamboo", which praises the gentleman's virtue and Ming Festival by its straightness, greenness and density, and creates a precedent of using bamboo to describe people.
This poem uses many metaphors. From the first chapter's "sharp edge, polished as a mill" to the third chapter's "gold as tin, jade as jade", it shows a change and a process, which shows that the beauty of a gentleman lies in accumulated knowledge and moral training.
Reference link: Wei Guofeng Qiao Feng-Baidu Encyclopedia