The allusions are as follows:
Teenagers are too narrow and incompetent, and Dapeng spreads his wings and hates the sky.
A retired Li Shangshu didn't believe in Jie Jin's talent, so he hosted a dinner party at home, invited several dignitaries to make poems, and sent someone to call Jie Jin to deal with it, hoping to ridicule Jie Jin in public. Jie Jin came to Li Fu and saw the door closed. The servant said: the master asked you to enter through the small door, but he stood at the gate and refused to enter through the small door. Li Shangshu heard the news and shouted: "The boy is narrow"; Jie Jin immediately replied: "Dapeng spreads his wings and hates the sky." Shangshu was taken aback: Oh, this boy's tone is not small, so he ordered someone to open the middle door to meet him.
Introduction to Jie Jin:
Jie Jin (1369- 14 15), the great gentry, was named Chunyu and Yi Xi. Born in Jishui (now Jishui, Jiangxi) in the Ming Dynasty, he was a scholar in the twenty-first year of Hongwu (1388), ranking first in the cabinet. Because of his high intelligence, Jie Jin dared not speak out and was demoted many times. Finally, he was imprisoned by "no courtiers". In the 13th year of Yongle (14 15), he was buried in a snowdrift and froze to death. He died at the age of 47. In the first year of Chenghua (1465), he conferred with the doctor, and Wen Yi died.
Jie Jin was a clever man since he was a child. His articles are elegant and wonderful, his poems are rich and elegant, his calligraphy is excellent in small letters, and he is good at cursive writing, especially in Weeds. Together with Xu Wei and Yang Shen, he is also known as the three great talents of Ming Dynasty, and he has written Collection of Xie Xueshi and Tian Huangyu. President Lu and Biography of Ancient and Modern Women: presided over the compilation of Yongle Grand Ceremony; Ink marks include poems in books, poems and songs in the Tang Dynasty, and anecdotes about Zhao Heng's imperial examinations in the Song Dynasty.