The first part: The century-old Confucian style will be spread forever in the ancient land of Zebei Pu Sang.
The second part: Qian Qiu Yuefu often recites the groupie Zheng Xinsheng.
Interpretation of righteousness
This couplet was inscribed by Zhao Yong, a member of China Calligraphers Association and vice chairman of the Municipal Federation of Literary and Art Circles, using simplified Chinese characters. His pen is delicate and neutral, quiet and spacious, with clear ink color and gentle and plain. The first part is about Confucius' fourteen years of traveling around the world and ten years of living in Weifang. Because Confucius was the founder of Confucianism and his disciples had a far-reaching influence on defending the country, Confucianism was popular for a hundred years. Pu Sang refers to the bamboo slips on Pu Shang, which is synonymous with ancient Wei land.
The second couplet is a poem about defending the country. Wei Shi occupies an important position in the Book of Songs, and its innovation has also brought many inspirations to later works. Yuefu folk songs, which are in the same strain as the Book of Songs, are deeply influenced by it, and Yuefu poems have a long time span, from the Han, Wei and Six Dynasties to the Tang Dynasty, so Yuefu has been circulated for thousands of years.
. . . . . .