Meaning: It is not the wine that makes people drunk, nor the flowers that make people fascinated, but the person himself who is intoxicated and fascinated by something.
From: "The Complete Biography of Fox Fate" by Zuiyue Shanren in the Qing Dynasty.
Tea is also intoxicating, why do I need wine, and books are fragrant, so why do I need flowers?
If the wine is not intoxicating, everyone will get drunk; if the flowers are not charming, everyone will be obsessed.
The sound of chanting becomes white snow, and the heart is as plain as plain, and the fragrance of plum blossoms is also clear.
The Huansha of the past is full of hatred today, and the beauties have a blind date as promised.
Tea can make me intoxicated. Since there is no need for wine, and the smell of books makes me smell the fragrance of ink, then why do I need the fragrance of flowers? It is not the wine that makes people drunk, nor the flowers that make people fascinated, but the people themselves who are intoxicated and fascinated by something.
Singing about white snow brings peace of mind, and at the end the plum blossoms emit fragrance. The place where Xishi wore her gauze in ancient times is unfortunately no longer visible today. You are as white and flawless as jade. How I wish I could get close to you and see your beautiful face.
Extended information
The full name of "The Complete Story of the Fox" is "The Complete Story of the Fox", which is a novel adapted from the Tanci "Qingshi Mountain" during the Guangxu period.
This book tells the story of Zhou Xin, a scholar who is smart, elegant, elegant, and fell in love with the jade-faced fairy girl named Nine-tailed Fox in Qingshi Mountain, but eventually became ill and could not afford it. Zhou Xin's servants and tenants successively asked Lu Dongbin, Li Tianwang, Nezha, and Erlang Shen to suppress and drive them away. The Jade-faced Fairy also asked Fairy Yunluo and Fairy Fengxiao to help fight.
After a fierce battle, the jade-faced fox was captured by the heavenly soldiers. However, because Zhou Xin was always attached to the jade-faced fox, the jade-faced fox also loved Zhou Xin until his death, so he moved the immortals and brought them together as an official couple.
The novel has a strong folk color, is trance-like, grotesque, and lingering. It can be called an excellent work of vernacular fantasy novels.
The classic sentences in "The Complete Biography of Fox Fate" are:
1. The appearance of a woman shy of the moon, and the appearance of a fish sinking before a wild goose.
Definition: An appearance that can make the moon hide, flowers feel ashamed, fish sink to the bottom of the water, and geese fall to the ground. Describes a woman who is extremely beautiful.
From: Chapter 1 of "The Complete Biography of Fox Fate": "I thought that there would be such a beautiful woman in the deep mountains and poor valleys, but she really has the appearance of a woman shy of the moon when the moon is closed, and the appearance of a fish that sinks into the sky."
< p>2. If you can't defeat the fox, you will be embarrassed.Interpretation: It is a metaphor for failing to eliminate the harm, but instead causing a lot of troubles and disasters.
From: Chapter 6 of "The Complete Story of the Fox": "As the saying goes: If you can't defeat the fox, you will be embarrassed. This is no child's play."
3 , I would rather die under the flowers than be a ghost.
Interpretation: It means willing to die for a beautiful woman.
From: Chapter 3 of "The Complete Biography of Fox Fate": "There are two common sayings in the world that suit Mr. Zhou's wishes: I would rather die under the flowers than be a ghost and be romantic."
4. The scars are healed and the pain is forgotten.
Interpretation: It is a metaphor for forgetting the roots or lessons when the situation gets better.
From: Chapter 11 of "The Complete Biography of Fox Fate": "We will never dare to live up to the great virtue. The scars will be healed, the pain will be forgotten, and we will never break our promises in the future."
5. If you can't defeat the fox, you will be embarrassed.
Interpretation: It is a metaphor for failing to eliminate the harm, but instead causing a lot of troubles and disasters.
From: Chapter 6 of "The Complete Story of the Fox": "As the saying goes: If you can't defeat the fox, you will be embarrassed. This is not a child's play.
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Baidu Encyclopedia--Everyone will get drunk if he is not drunk