What kind of feelings does Lu Xun express in "From Baicao Yuan to Sanwei Bookstore"

"From Baicao Garden to Sanwei Bookstore": Sanwei Bookstore: It was a famous private school in Shaoxing City in the late Qing Dynasty. Lu Xun studied here when he was 12 years old, and his tutor was Mr. Shoujinghu. Sanwei Study House is a small flower hall with three long rooms. It was originally the study room of the Shou family. Mr. Shou Jingwu has been teaching here for sixty years. The flavor of "Sanwei Bookstore": The "Sanwei Bookstore" mentioned by Mr. Lu Xun in his famous prose "From Baicao Garden to Sanwei Bookstore" is located near Mr. Lu Xun's former residence in Shaoxing, Zhejiang. It is the place where Mr. Lu Xun studied in his youth. . So, why is it called "Sanwei Bookstore"? It turns out that "three flavors" are taken from the ancient saying that "reading the classics tastes like rice and beams, reading history tastes like delicacies, reading hundreds of schools of thought, tastes like fermented glutinous rice (pronounced Xihai, that is, vinegar and meat sauce)". The general idea is: reading the Four Books and Five Classics tastes like eating rice and noodles, which are the basis of food; reading historical records tastes like drinking fine wine and eating delicacies; reading books by various schools of thought tastes like soy sauce and vinegar (like the condiments in cooking) ). The horizontal plaque of "Sanwei Bookstore" was written by Liang Shanzhou, a famous calligrapher during the Qianjia period of the Qing Dynasty. At that time, there was such a woodcut couplet hanging on both sides of the plaque: "The most silent happiness is filial piety, and the flavor of soup is reading." The "three flavors" in "From Baicao Garden to Sanwei Bookstore" means: Reading classics is like eating. Staple food; reading history is like eating dishes; reading other things is like adding seasonings. Regarding "three flavors": Descendants of Mr. Shou Jingwu, Lu Xun's private school teacher (Sanwei Bookstore), said that "three flavors" refer to the warmth of cloth, the fragrance of vegetable roots, and the long taste of poetry and books.

Buyi refers to the common people. "Buyi Nuan" means being willing to be a common people instead of becoming an official or a master; "caigenxiang" means being satisfied with simple meals and not longing for the enjoyment of delicacies; "poems and books have a long taste" means seriousness Understand the profound content of poetry and books, and gain a profound taste