Lu Xun's "Inscription on the Sanyi Pagoda" (1933)
--The Sanyi Pagoda is the pagoda where the doves and bones are buried in Sanyili, Zhabei, Shanghai, China. People built it.
The flying flames annihilate the son of man, leaving the ruins of the ruins and the hungry doves.
Even when I left my burning house, I left my tall tower in memory of Yingzhou.
The fine bird still holds the stone in its dream, but the fighter resists the flow with sincerity and determination.
After all the calamity, the brothers are here. When they meet, they smile and forget their grudges.
"Lu Xun's Diary" June 21, 1933: "Dr. Nishimura (Makoto) got the bereaved dove after the war in Shanghai. He kept it and raised it. They were at peace with each other at first, but eventually passed away and built a pagoda to keep it. Hidden, and collected questions and chants, the rate is consistent, and the conversation is about love. "Nishimura is a Japanese doctor.
① "Guanzi·Neiye": "A big heart leads to courage." Note: "A heart is both vast and brave."
②Jie Bo: Sanskrit, Indian mythology Brahma, the God of creation, calls a day and night a calamity wave, which is equivalent to 4.332 million years in the human world.