In the book, the old artist Su Kunsheng sighed loudly and expressed himself incisively and vividly:
"I have seen, Jinling Yushu warbler sound dawn, Qinhuai waterside pavilion flowers bloom early, but it is easy to ice! Look at him starting from Zhulou, watching him entertain guests and watching his building collapse.
I slept in this pile of moss tiles and watched the rise and fall of 50 years. That Wuyi Lane is not surnamed Wang; Mochou Lake, ghosts cry at night; Phoenix terrace, perched owl! The remaining Meng Shan is the most authentic, but it is hard to lose the homeland. If you don't believe this map and map, just sing a set of' mourning for the south of the Yangtze River' and sing sadly until you are old. "
Extended data:
Peach Blossom Fan is a story that happened in Nanjing in the late Ming Dynasty. The drama focuses on the joys and sorrows of Li and shows the social reality of Nanjing in the late Ming Dynasty. At the same time, it also reveals the reasons for the decline of Hong Guang's regime, praises the national heroes and the people at the bottom who are loyal to the country, and shows the pain of the Ming Dynasty adherents' national subjugation.
1690, Kong returned to Beijing as Dr. imperial academy and lived an idle life in Cao. His play Peach Blossom Fan was written after a long period of brewing around 1699.
Kong (1648~ 17 18), whose real name is Ji Chong, is the Eastern Tang Dynasty (Tang Dynasty in Sui and Yuan Dynasties), and his nickname is Shao Tang, calling himself a mountain man.
A native of Qufu, Shandong Province, the sixty-fourth grandson of Confucius, was a poet and playwright in the early Qing Dynasty. He inherited the Confucian ideological tradition and scholarship, paid attention to etiquette, music, military literature, farming and other knowledge since childhood, and also studied the law of music, which laid the foundation for future drama creation. The world compared him with Hong Sheng, the author of The Palace of Eternal Life, and called him "Nanhongbei Cave".
References:
Peach Blossom Fan-Baidu Encyclopedia