The King Demon’s Bi An, Bi An (bi an), also known as Charter, is a mythical beast in Han myths and legends. One of the nine sons born in Dragon, ranked seventh. It looks like a tiger, prone to litigation, but also powerful. The tiger head-shaped decoration on the upper part of the prison door is his portrait.
Yang Sen’s Suān ní is one of the nine sons of a dragon in ancient Han mythology (one says it is the fifth son, another says it is the eighth son). It is shaped like a lion and likes to smoke and sit down, so its image usually appears on the incense burner, swallowing smoke and blowing out mist.
The black tiger is Zhao Gongming's mount: it roars and leaps out of the mountains, with a few spots of heroic sweat and blood; its sharp claws are as brave as a hook, and its steel teeth are as fierce as a sword. The wind arrived first before it could move, and the wind caused the galloping grass to extricate itself. The beasts were afraid of being subdued, and they dared to show off their power and looked at it casually. They were temporarily caught by Zhao Caishen and used as foot power.
Zhang Kui's mount in the list of gods is very strange, called "One-horned Black Smoke Beast". It is as fast as a god, like a burst of black smoke, and like flying clouds and lightning.
The mount of Zheng Lun (General Heng among the two Generals Hengha) in the list of gods is called the Fire-Eyed Golden-Eyed Beast.
Yu Yuan’s mount in the list of gods is the golden-eyed five-cloud camel: Some soldiers brought the five-cloud camel. When Yu Yuan saw the five-cloud camel, it turned out to be powerful, as evidenced by a poem:
The golden eyes are wide open and the rainbow is spitting out, the divine whip is burning the tail of the demon dragon
The grinning mouth is long and hissing with the sound of thunder, and the four hooves are stepping on the clouds like the wind blowing.
The body of a mysterious camel with the head of a tiger, a dragon's tail, and the beauty of a crane-crowned beast on top.
It only takes a moment to travel around the world, and then it shows its speed and brilliance.
The mount of Taoist Randeng in the list of gods is a sika deer: Zhao Gongming was so angry that he borrowed the "golden scissors" to cut the sika deer in two pieces.
The identity of the peacock is Kong Xuan, the mount of the Taoist Zhunti.
The Dapeng was tamed by Taoist monk Ran Deng, and he occasionally rides it, but after all, Dapeng and Peacock are also characters, they can only be regarded as fellow Taoists, not as mounts.
Outside the door, they were also crouching on both sides of the lobby of the government office. Whenever the yamen chief sits in the court, his image appears on the top of the chief executive's title plate and the silence card. He looks around and looks around to maintain the solemnity and uprightness of the court.