beat the tiger
One, two, three, four, five, go up the mountain and shoot tigers,
The tiger missed, but hit the squirrel.
How many squirrels are there? Let me count.
One, two, three, four, five, five little squirrels.
"Going up the mountain to shoot tigers" is an old proverb, nursery rhyme and a children's song on Mars.
The old adage
One, two, three, four, five, go up the mountain and shoot tigers. Tigers are at the top of the food chain, and once they become powerful, they are unstoppable. In nature, they are fearless. They are afraid of people on earth. China has been the "king of beasts" since ancient times, that is, "the length of caterpillar" and "the length of scale worm", so the ancients often used to leave dragon and tiger as guards.
As a beastmaster, the tiger's ferocity is self-evident. Confucius crossed Mount Tai, and a woman was crying at the grave. Confucius asked Luz to ask, and the woman replied that her father-in-law, husband and son all died here. Confucius asked why he didn't leave here, and the woman said there was no tyranny here.
Confucius sighed at the sky: "tyranny is fiercer than tiger."
Tyranny is fiercer than a tiger.
Extended data
Other nursery rhymes "Counting Songs"
Counting songs are nursery rhymes that skillfully train children's counting ability by describing images suitable for children's aesthetic psychology.
Such as: the traditional nursery rhyme "123";
One, two, three, climb the mountain.
Four, five, six, somersault
Seven, eight, nine, racket ball.
Open your hands and ten fingers.