There are bandits and gentlemen, and this is a gentleman.
Looking forward to the Olympics, Green Bamboo? .
There are bandits and gentlemen, such as cutting, cutting and grinding? .
What's the matter, huh? .
There are bandits and gentlemen, so you can't be embarrassed.
Looking forward to the Olympics, green bamboo.
There are bandits, gentlemen. They will be as good as stars.
She's embarrassed. She's embarrassed.
There are bandits and gentlemen, so you can't be embarrassed.
Looking forward to the Olympics, green bamboo is like a basket.
There are bandits, such as gold, tin, jade, jade.
Wide and wide, heavy and heavy.
Be good at joking, not abusing.
?
-The Book of Songs Feng Wei Qi 'ao
After reading so many poems praising beauty, I finally got a poem praising a gentleman.
So, what is a gentleman?
Generally speaking, the most metaphor we use to describe beauty is flowers, such as peach blossom, pear blossom, lotus flower, hibiscus flower and so on, because only delicate flowers can be worthy of a girl's beauty. To describe a gentleman, jade, bamboo and jade are smooth and moist, just like a gentleman's elegant character; Bamboo is modest and restrained, just like a gentleman's broad mind.
Qi 'ao (the sound of "Australia" is the same as "jade") means the winding shore of Qi's water. Every paragraph in the poem begins with Qi Shui, and takes green bamboo and beautiful jade as a metaphor to praise the elegance and good character of the gentleman. Qishui, located in the northern part of Henan Province, was a first-class tributary of the Yellow River in ancient times. People in the pre-Qin period seemed to love this river very much, and many folk songs in the Book of Songs mentioned Qi Shui.
For example, "The Book of Songs Feng Wei" mentioned that "Qi Shui Tang Tang was gradually put on the car" for self-protection; "Qi has a shore and a plate", "There are foxes and foxes" in The Book of Songs and "Qi has a flowing spring" in The Book of Songs refer to Qi's water. In addition, the new palace platform built by Wei in the Book of Songs to cheat and marry Xuan Jiang is also near Qishui.
Look at the winding Qishui River and the green bamboo forest. There is an elegant gentleman, like learned ivory and polished jade. Look at his majestic posture, look at his aboveboard. Such an elegant gentleman will always be indelible in his mind.
Look at the curved water and lush green bamboo. There was an elegant gentleman with beautiful jade hanging from his ears and jewels on his hat like twinkling stars. Look at his majestic posture, look at his aboveboard. Such an elegant gentleman will always be indelible in his mind.
Look at the curved water, green bamboo and lush green. There is an elegant gentleman, as bright as gold and silver and as warm as jade. Generous and open-minded, riding on Xiangqian Che. Witty and lively, gentle and considerate to people.
This poem uses a series of metaphors, such as bamboo, jade and Suk Kim. And praise the excellent qualities of the gentleman, such as having both ability and political integrity, being gentle as jade, being open-minded and humorous.
As early as when I was addicted to Chu Ci, I felt that the ancients were particularly boastful, and those descriptions and metaphors were wonderful. Qu Yuan likes to compare gentlemen and beauties with herbs, such as Li Jiang, loquat and Ficus pumila. It's really suitable, and only vanilla can deserve such a noble figure.
Qu Yuan's disciple Song Yu inherited the talent of the master. In his Ode to Goddess and Ode to the Lust of Losers, those rhetoric and metaphors describing beauty have been circulated for thousands of years, and few people can surpass them.
Using bamboo as a metaphor for a gentleman probably began in the era of The Book of Songs. Bamboo is evergreen and modest, just like a gentleman's integrity and modesty, so bamboo, plum, orchid and chrysanthemum are collectively called four gentlemen. When I first read Qiao, it was like a gentleman in Tsing Yi coming out of the book, wearing a jade crown and being elegant and modest.
"There are bandits, gentlemen, incisive and polished", this sentence compares elegant gentlemen to ivory and beautiful jade polished by research, and "incisive and polished" has also become a common idiom for later generations to describe research and discussion in knowledge. But what impressed me the most was Jin Yong's martial arts drama when I was a child. When two hosts meet, they usually kill each other with their eyes. Then one of them said, this warrior is so powerful that you have beaten invincible hands all over the world. Why don't we learn from each other? Therefore, in my mind, "learning" has always been synonymous with "comparison painting", but I don't know where this meaning originally came from.
Since this poem is a compliment, someone needs to praise it. Judging from the poem itself, it is likely that the praise was given to a sage at that time, but actually it was not directed at anyone.
Qi 'ao belongs to Feng Wei. At that time, most of the successive monarchs of Wei were absurd and incompetent, such as Ji Shuo, who married his daughter-in-law, raped and killed two brothers, and died of raising cranes ... So the people of Wei were extremely looking forward to an aristocratic ruler, even a scholar-bureaucrat. I only hope that this "gentleman" can use his talent to bring light to the country.
However, some people say that Qi Ao praised Wu He, who was an official in Zhou Pingwang during the Spring and Autumn Period. He is tolerant, honest and can accept others' opinions with an open mind, so he is very popular with people.
This sentence comes from Preface to Mao Shi.
"Qi Ao" is a beauty martial virtue. If you have an article, you can listen to its rules and regulations and defend yourself with courtesy, so you can enter the week. Beauty is poetry. "Probably means JiAo praise martial arts character. Wu Gong was brilliant, good at listening to people's advice and being self-disciplined, so he was able to worship Hou in the Zhou Dynasty and (the people) wrote this poem to praise him? .
A real gentleman has more than just a beautiful appearance. He can't get rid of it. He should be what he looks like. He not only has a jade-like gentle and elegant appearance, but also has a more noble and outstanding moral character, which deserves everyone's respect and love. There is a saying in costume dramas that "heroes cherish heroes", which means that real heroes appreciate each other whether they are antagonistic or not. The same is true of gentlemen. If he is really outstanding in virtue, even people who don't like you will sincerely admire you.
As the saying goes, love in the city shows that people have similar requirements for men and women regardless of ancient and modern times. A girl should be beautiful, a man's appearance is second, and what matters is his talent and morality. It would be more perfect if you could have talent and appearance.
Another handsome guy with the same name as Pan Yue is Song Yu. Song Yu is a disciple of Qu Yuan, and his poems "Gao", "Goddess Fu" and "Disciple Fu" are all masterpieces handed down from generation to generation.
In addition, Ji Kang, one of the seven sages of bamboo forest, Zou Ji in Qi Wang satirized by Zou Ji, and Qi Wang in middle school textbooks are all talented and noble people. According to the standard of "extraordinary pride", I think everyone will be convinced and treat these people as gentlemen.
Modest gentleman, gentle as jade. What is a gentleman? A true gentleman should be cultivated like bamboo and beautiful jade.