The water in the rough waves is clear, you can hold my tassel.
The Water of Canglang is a folk song that spread in the Northern Han Dynasty during the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, and it originated from Song of Walking Son. The original text is "surging water, crystal clear, can hold my tassel." The water in the rough waves is turbid and can lick my feet. " The author is no longer under review.
Extended data:
The water in the rough waves is crystal clear, and you can hold my tassel. The water in the rough waves is turbid and can lick my feet. "
Confucius said, "If you listen to it, you will get it."
Qu Yuan's "The Fisherman's Songs of Chu": "The fisherman laughed and went away, singing:' The water in the surging waves is clear, and I can hold the tassel. The water in the rough waves is muddy and can lick my feet. " "
This is a folk song that spread in the Northern Han Dynasty during the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period. Song of Canglang was sung as early as the Spring and Autumn Period, and Confucius and Mencius also mentioned it. Mencius said: "A boy sang:' The clear water of surging waves can lead me to tassel; The water in the rough waves is so turbid that it can be used to drown my feet. "(Mencius on Li Lou) Confucius said,' Listen, boy! Clear and transparent is enough, and turbidity is enough. ""According to the Analects of Confucius and Records of the Chu Family, Confucius has been to Yexian and other places in bei chu. Therefore, its original author is not Qu Yuan, but a ballad that spread among the people in the pre-Qin period, and the author has no way to verify it.
References:
Song of Water in Canglang-Baidu Encyclopedia