To control a person, he must dress appropriately. Son of King Qi, wife of King Wei, sister of East Palace, aunt of King Xing, and Tan Ye.
Soft, skin solidified, collar like a salamander, teeth like a rhinoceros, a cicada's head is a moth's eyebrow, she smiled and looked forward to it.
Master Di Di said that in the countryside. Four horses were arrogant, and Zhu Biao parted ways and took the court. The doctor retired effortlessly.
The river is rich, and the living water in the north runs. You do it, you get rich, and you're exposed. Ordinary ginger is guilty, and ordinary people are guilty.
Guo Fengwei Feng Shuoren is a poem in The Book of Songs, the first poetry collection in ancient China. This is a poem describing the magnificence and beauty of Zhuang Jiang, the daughter of Qi State, after her marriage, focusing on the noble and beautiful image of Zhuang Jiang. The poem consists of four chapters with seven sentences in each chapter, starting with Zhuang Jiang's identity and family background, and then describing his appearance, just like a concrete shot. The last section depicts the grand occasion of "ordinary ginger" and "ordinary scholar" in the beautiful environment of "river rolling" and "dew rising", just like a painting. As the camera slowly zooms into the distance, a group of people in towards the distant are vivid and meaningful. This poem is detailed in description and fresh in metaphor. It is the earliest beautiful chapter in China ancient literature to engrave the beauty of women's appearance and modality, which opened the precedent for later generations to write beauty by metaphor, and has been highly respected and favored by people.