Di Zigui's recitation method:
1. Excerpts can be selected. If there are multiple people, the formation can be changed, or a certain paragraph can be read in turn.
2. It can be paired with music. If you are alone, you can have some body language movements and read with emotion.
"Disciple Regulations", formerly known as "Xun Mengwen", was written by Li Yuxiu, a scholar during the Kangxi period of the Qing Dynasty. Its content adopts the literal meaning of Article 6 of the "Xue Er Pian" of "The Analects of Confucius": "Disciples should be filial when they enter, and fraternal when they leave, be sincere and trustworthy, love others universally, and be kind, and if they have spare capacity for action, they should study literature." List the rules and regulations that disciples should abide by at home, when going out, when dealing with others, when dealing with things, and when studying. Later, it was revised and adapted by Jia Cunren of the Qing Dynasty and renamed "Disciples' Regulations". It records 108 words and deeds of Confucius. There are 360 ??sentences and 1,080 words, three to one sentence, two or four sentences that connect the meaning, rhyme together, and are catchy. The whole article is first a "general narration" and then divided into sections. It consists of seven parts: "filial piety when entering, brotherhood when leaving, sincerity, trust, universal love for all, kindness, and remaining literary". "Disciple" has many meanings. Teacher Deng Weidong of the Beijing People's Traditional Chinese Society pointed out that the meaning of "disciple" should also keep pace with the times: at home, it refers to children; at school, it refers to students; in the company, it refers to employees; in the unit, it refers to employees. The next level; in society, it refers to citizens; in the inheritance of Chinese culture, it refers to postgraduate students. "Gui" means norms, rules, rules, and rules.