What does Chen Jichang have to do with the roar of lions?
The story of the lion's roar: Buddhist classics say that "a lion's roar makes all animals squat", so Buddhists use "a lion's roar" to describe the majesty of the Buddha's lecture. Su Dongpo, a great poet in the Song Dynasty, had a friend named Liu, his wife, who was very jealous. Whenever a singer goes to dinner, Liu knocks on the wall with a wooden stick and scolds the guests away. Usually, Chen Jichang likes to talk about Buddhism. Afterwards, Su Dongpo borrowed a lion's roar play to describe his angry voice, and wrote a long poem called "A Message to Wu Deren's Jane Chen Jichang", in which there are some words: "Mr. Dongpo has no money ... only his temple has no reason to be mysterious. Longqiu laymen are also poor, and they talk about sleepless nights. Suddenly I heard lion roars, and I fell into the palm of my hand. " The laity of Longqiu in the poem refers to Chen Jichang; Hedong refers to the poem "Liu is the daughter of Hedong" written by Du Fu, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, and compares Liu, the wife of Chen, with Liu Ye as the prominent surname of Hedong County (now Shanxi Province). This poem vividly describes the author's embarrassment, Liu's intense and often helpless situation. Later, people took the "lion roar" as a synonym for a jealous wife and a shrew. Some people even call the phenomenon of being afraid of his wife "seasonal addiction".