The coquettish allusion comes from Wuyi Lane.

When it comes to the word "Sao", it is generally considered a bad word. Especially when it is used to describe women, it often reminds people of debauchery and frivolity, showing off beauty and so on. However, the word "Sao" originated from the Song Dynasty and was closely related to an original "resident" of Wuyi Lane in Nanjing.

Many people's memories of Wuyi Lane come from Liu Yuxi, a great poet in the Tang Dynasty. "Rosefinch bridge weeds, Wuyi alley mouth sunset oblique. In the old society, Wang Xietang flew into the homes of ordinary people. " Now this poem is carved on a stone tablet with hairy grass on the left side of the alley Many people occasionally look at this monument when passing by, and think that the snacks in the Confucius Temple and the cruise ships on the Qinhuai River are far more attractive than the Millennium Gu Xiang.

In essence, the history of the name "Wuyi Lane" has been around 2000 years. According to legend, Sun Quan's Wu Dong army, dressed in black uniforms, was stationed on the north bank of Qinhuai River to defend Kyoto. It was called "Wuyi Camp", which is the origin of Wuyi Lane. During the Eastern Jin Dynasty, Wuyi Lane became famous for helping Si Marui to establish Wang Dao, the prime minister of the Eastern Jin Dynasty, planning the battle of Feishui, and reviving Xie An, the prime minister of the Jin family. Its descendants lived here for nearly 300 years, leaving many ups and downs and unpredictable stories.

According to legend, Xie Lingyun, the great-grandson of Xie An, started the school of landscape poetry, and his poems were very brilliant. The biography of Xie Lingyun in Song Dynasty records: "From Han Dynasty to Wei Dynasty, more than 400 years have passed, and the style has changed three times ... all ancestors are coquettish." That is to say, in the past 400 years, although the style has been constantly changing, Guo Feng in The Book of Songs and Li Sao in The Songs of the South are still taken as models. Praise poem "comparable to coquettish" means brilliant literary talent, which is a high praise.