In 227 BC, Jing Ke came to Qin with the map of Yan Du Kang and Fan's head to assassinate Ying Zheng, the king of Qin. Before he left, Yan Taizi Dan and others saw Jing Ke off at the Yishui River. The scene is very tragic.
When a good friend met Zhu with a gift, Jing Ke sang to the beat: "The wind is rustling and the water is cold, and the strong men go and don't return." This is a poem sung by Jing Ke when he said goodbye. After Jing Ke came to Qin, the king of Qin summoned him in Xianyang Palace. When Jing Ke presented the map of Yan Du Kang, he was desperate, but in the end, his assassination failed and he was killed by the bodyguard of the king of Qin, so Jing Ke died.
Extended data:
At the end of the Warring States period, Qin represented the interests of the emerging landlord class. Although the old aristocracy headed by the monarchs of the six countries, that is, the slave-owning class, is on the verge of extinction, they are still doing their best to carry out political, military and even despicable assassinations, among which Jing Ke's assassination of Qin is an outstanding representative.
After Qin destroyed Zhao, the soldiers pointed to the southern border of Yan, and Taizi Dan decided to send Jing Ke to Qin to stab the king of Qin. Jing Ke presented Taizi Dan, and proposed to present the maps of Fan and Yan Du Kang (now Zhuoxian, Yixian and Gu 'an in Hebei Province are fertile fields) to the King of Qin. In 227 BC, Jing Ke came to the State of Qin with the map of Yan Du Kang and Fan's head to assassinate the king of Qin.