Dapeng spreads his wings and hates the sky. What was the previous sentence?

Original: A teenager without talent is too narrow-minded, and Dapeng spreads his wings and hates the sky.

Origin: Jie Jin in Ming Dynasty.

You, a young man without talent, still have the face to dislike the small place and compare yourself to a full-fledged Dapeng. You are not satisfied with spreading your wings and thinking that the sky is not high enough.

Allusions:

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 surprised: alas, this boy was so angry that he ordered someone to open the middle door to meet him.

Extended data:

Jie Jin's main achievements:

Poems: Way to Go, niece of Gui, meeting Qixingyan, the song of Lushan Mountain, tengxian, Dou Jiazhai, Sang, etc.

Works: Baiyun Draft, Dongshan Collection, Taiping Shushu, Ding Ugly Seal, Wen Yi Collection, Miscellaneous Notes on Spring Rain, Tian Huangyu's Death, and Later Generations' Compilation of Literary Gong Ji.

Chairman: Record of Mao and Biography of Ancient and Modern Women.

Presided over the compilation: Yongle Grand Ceremony.

Calligraphy: Jie Jin is good at calligraphy, small letters and cursive script, and his brushwork is ingenious and unexpected. His cursive script is the first cursive script in the late Ming Dynasty, and his ink includes poems in the book, poems of people in the Tang Dynasty, seven-star poems and anecdotes of imperial examinations in the Song Dynasty.

Baidu Encyclopedia-Jie Jin