The next sentence of Xia Yuhe by the Daming Lake is:
Only when the cattail grass is as tough as silk, the rock cannot shift, the mountain has no edges, and the heaven and earth are in harmony, then I dare to be separated from you.
This sentence originally appeared in what Ziwei said to the emperor in Huanzhugege.
The original text is: Your Majesty, do you still remember the Xia Yuhe on the Daming Lake that year? (It means that the emperor met Xia Yuhe during his southern tour and promised to take her back to the palace, but he did not fulfill it. Xia Yuhe gave birth to the emperor’s daughter Xia Ziwei.)
Xia Yuhe, from Qiong Yao’s novel "Huan Zhuge Ge" The character in the story is from Jinan. He is proficient in music, chess, calligraphy and painting. He is gentle, elegant, graceful and moving. He met and fell in love with Emperor Qianlong on the banks of Daming Lake. She is the biological mother of Ziwei Gege.
Eighteen years ago, Qianlong met Xia Ziwei's mother, Xia Yuhe, at the Daming Lake in Jinan, and the two fell in love. But due to political relations, Qianlong left Yu He and promised to come back to find her. Yuhe has Qianlong's flesh and blood.
But Qianlong never came back. Yu He was very disappointed. When she was dying, she told her daughter Ziwei about it and asked her to go to the capital to find her father, Qianlong. She had the courage to break through ethics, but ended up depressed by feudal ethics.
The most touching lines were left in "Huan Zhu Ge Ge": "I have waited for a lifetime, hated for a lifetime, complained for a lifetime, and thought about for a lifetime, but I am still grateful to God for allowing me to have this wonderful life." Wait, hateful, resentful, and imaginable people, otherwise, life will be a dry well, lifeless.
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