2, Sanwei, the ancients have two sayings:
(1) An analogy of predecessors' feelings about reading: "Reading classics tastes like rice, reading history tastes like vegetables, and reading a hundred flavors like acyl candy." The three experiences are collectively called "three flavors";
(2) The "three flavors" came from Li Shu's "Handan Bibliography" in the Song Dynasty: "The taste of poetry and books is too strong, breaking history, and the child is acyl sugar, which is three flavors." This is to compare poetry, history and other books to food and to good spiritual food.
(3) Zuxun of Mr. Shou Jason Wu: Warm clothes and fragrant vegetables make reading taste long. Later, it became the motto of three pools and one moon.
① Borrowing Buddhist language, "Sanwei" means "Samadhi", which is a transliteration of Sanskrit Samadhi and a Buddhist language. Also translated as "Samadhi". The free translation of "Zhengding" originally refers to the three realms of reading Buddhist scriptures and understanding the meaning of the scriptures: one is "determination", the other is "acceptance" and the third is "equal holding", which means to stop distracting thoughts before chanting Buddhism and make your mind stable and focused; The attitude of understanding Confucian classics must be correct, and there must be all kinds of respect and piety; In the process of learning, you should concentrate on it and keep a consistent spirit. With the integration of Buddhist thought and Chinese culture, "Samadhi" gradually extended to a summary of the essence and spiritual significance of things, and there appeared such expressions as "one China, three places" and "two China, three places" to describe the accuracy and profundity of knowledge.
② Three pools printing the moon: it was a famous private school in Shaoxing in the late Qing Dynasty. Mr. Lu Xun studied here at the age of 12, and studied under Mr. Shou. San Tan Yin Yue, the small living room between three long rooms, was originally the study of Shou Jia. Mr. Shou Jason Wu has been teaching here for 60 years. (3) The flavor of "three pools printing the moon": The "three pools printing the moon" mentioned by Mr. Lu Xun in his famous essay "From Baicaoyuan to Three pools printing the moon" is near the former residence of Mr. Lu Xun in Shaoxing City, Zhejiang Province, where Mr. Lu Xun studied as a teenager. "Three flavors" come from the old saying "Reading classics tastes like rice, reading history tastes like vegetables, and reading a hundred flavors like sugar". Reading four books and five classics is the basis of eating rice and flour; Reading Historical Records tastes like drinking wine and eating delicious food: reading books like "A Hundred Schools of Thought contend" tastes like soy sauce and vinegar (like seasoning for cooking). The plaque of "Three Tans Printing the Moon" was written by Liang Shanzhou, a famous calligrapher in Ganjia period of Qing Dynasty. At that time, a pair of woodcut couplets hung on both sides of the plaque: "The greatest joy is silence and filial piety, and the greatest interest is reading."