When Bai Juyi of the Ming Dynasty passed by Li Bai's tomb, he saw a lot of graffiti on the tombstone, and the level was uneven. Because the poems in front of Li Bai's tomb were crudely written and had different rhymes, which were simply insulting to elegance, Bai Juyi wrote a poem. One of the lines was about Lu Ban getting a big ax in front of the gate. This line is also very popular among people nowadays. It's broad, and it's mostly used to describe people who don't know their own abilities. Because Li Bai was a literary talent, and his identity was very special, his way of worshiping was not only the ordinary way of worshiping among the people, but also a more unique activity that slowly evolved, that is Many literati felt respected when they came to Li Bai's tomb, so they would compose poems in front of Li Bai's tomb and dedicate poems to Li Bai. So as time goes by, Li Bai's current graffiti works are very numerous, but the level is relatively uneven.
Although some are fine works, many are shoddy. It was not until Bai Juyi came to Li Bai's grave and wrote a poem that the current situation changed. In this way, Bai Juyi once belittled you and praised you higher than Du Fu, but in Bai Juyi's mind, Li Bai was still very great. This sentence of Lu Ban's big ax in front of the door uses a very clever angle to express some of Bai Juyi's feelings for Li Bai, and it is a respect from the heart.
At the same time, it also warned some passers-by not to graffiti on Li Bai's tomb casually. Although they were out of admiration for Li Bai, this was a kind of disrespect for Li Bai, because Li Bai was a poetry immortal. Such behavior was tantamount to Lu Ban playing with a big ax in front of the door, which was overestimating his own capabilities. It would be even worse for Li Bai, who is under the Nine Springs, to see these unread works.