Author: Wu Youru in Qing Dynasty
We can only rely on the wind, not fake feathers.
The red line flies, and there is a way to Qingyun.
You can only become heroic by the strength of the wind, not by fullness. Flying into the sky with the red line is the road to success.
Extended data
The story about the paper crane:
1943 65438+1On October 7th, a little girl named Sadako Sasaki was born in Hiroshima, Japan. 1On August 6, 945, an atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima and exploded at a distance of 1.7 km from Zhenzi's home.
Zhenzi, who was only two years old at that time, was thrown out of the house by the shock wave generated by the explosion. Fortunately, he was not hurt. Her mother then escaped with her daughter, but was soon caught in a black rain full of radioactive dust.
Sadako grew up healthily and entered primary school. Her dream is to be a middle school PE teacher. At the end of June 1954 1 1, Zhenzi caught a cold, and then lumps began to appear on her back and behind her ears, and she was diagnosed as leukemia. On June 65438 +2654381October +0, Zhenzi was admitted to Hiroshima Red Cross Hospital for treatment. The doctor said she could live another year at most.
At the beginning of August, 1955, medical treatment inhibited the spread of Zhen Zi's back lump, and she felt much better. But the purple patches on her legs indicate that her condition is getting worse. On August 6th 1955, the hospital allowed her to leave the hospital and attend the peace memorial ceremony with her family. But on the way to the park, Zhenzi's gums began to bleed, so she had to return to the hospital and could not attend the ceremony.
At this time, paper cranes of various colors were sent from Nagoya. People fold these paper cranes and hang them in hospitals to encourage patients. Inspired by these bright and beautiful paper cranes, many patients began to fold paper cranes, and Zhenzi was one of them. She pinned her hopes of recovery on every paper crane. In less than a month, she folded 1000 paper cranes.
She strung each paper crane with a string, hung it on the ceiling of the ward, and then continued to fold it. By the end of September, 1955, the number of white blood cells in Zhenzi had increased to three times that when she was hospitalized a year ago. Her condition is getting worse and worse, and she can't walk by herself. 1On the morning of October 25th, 1 1 year-old Zhen Zi closed her eyes forever.
Touched people wrote Zhenzi and her 1000 paper cranes in books and carved them into statues to commemorate this little Japanese girl who longed for and worked hard to survive. Today, paper cranes have become a symbol of courage, telling people to be braver in the face of unfortunate fate.