The Origin of Shao Kangjie's Plum Blossom Poems in Song Dynasty
Shao Yong's Plum Blossom Poems.
Plum Blossom Poetry, also known as Shao Yong's Prophecy and Yi Shu's Plum Blossom Poetry, is ten prophetic poems written by Shao Yong, a Taoist and Yi-ology scholar in the Northern Song Dynasty. It is called plum blossom poem because there is a saying in the prophecy poem that "counting plum blossoms opens the world".
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Qing Tsui Hark's poem Qing Chao Ji Fang Mei Hua said: "In Song Dynasty, Shao Kangjie said:' Hull rode to Chang 'an and opened up a vast sea area in the Central Plains. At the beginning of the flood, the clear light should look at Hanzhong. "This said that sai-jo entered the customs, set up a tripod for Yanjing, and then opened the maritime ban to trade with other countries, and there was the Guangdong Kou Rebellion, and 191August/year19 Li Uprising in Wuchang. "
Shao Kangjie's name is Shao Yong. He is famous for his study of the Book of Changes. He transformed the eight diagrams divination method into two simple methods: the method of knowing the heart of plum blossoms and the number of plum blossoms. Later generations used this as an excuse to forge "plum blossom poems." Judging from the sentence in the last quotation, "it is the cloud of the dynasty", and there are also so-called predictions of Song Yuanming. However, Song Quan Poem published by Peking University Press and edited by Fu Xuancong is not as good as Shao's Plum Blossom Poem, which shows that it was forged by the people, and it was a long time after Wuchang Uprising.
There is also a folk fortune-telling book written by Shao Yong, which is called "The Number of Stupid Children". Yang Shen's "Dan Lead Record" in the Ming Dynasty pointed out that Zhang Zai, a scholar in the Song Dynasty, was ill and once asked Shao Yong: Are you good at fortune telling? Can you work out the result of my illness? Shao Yong said: If it is a destiny (that is, Dafa), I can know it, but I can't know what secular people generally call a destiny (that is, specific things). Accordingly, Yang Shen said: "That's right. This world is not thick to slander the sages, be a big number, be stupid, and rely on Kang Shu. " The so-called wandering warlock is the so-called warlock who does not engage in labor and production, idles and deceives people by divination. It is such people who forge all kinds of predictions.
Tsui Hark's "Clearing Banknotes, Ji Fang Classes, Pushing Fate with Idiots" said: "This book was spread from Kanto to Shanxi at the beginning of the founding of the People's Republic of China. There are eight cases of original books and five cases destroyed by water, so there is one sentence that can't be checked, that is, the number of losses. But the cloud came from Kangjie, and the Manchu surname could be determined before the Song Dynasty. People like Guarga and Cow Cobalt can figure it out and know it's fake. "
Tsui Hark doesn't believe that Song people can predict the names of Manchu people in Qing Dynasty, so he thinks this book is false, which is quite right. There are too many copies of the so-called "iron plate magic number", and it takes eight boxes. Five boxes fell into the water when crossing the river. When fortune tellers meet people who can't tell their fortune according to the eight characters, they say that these life-saving algorithms are all lost because the book fell into the water. This is bullshit in itself. Books in the Song Dynasty are no longer wooden slips. How can there be so many volumes in a book? The fortune teller sent a fortune-telling book, but he couldn't figure out that it would fall into the water, which became a very obvious self-exposure.
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