Is the tomb in Pan Yueming's Ghost Blowing Lights in Longling Cave Li's?
After reading Longling Cave, I believe most people will subconsciously think that one of the tomb owners under the Fishbone Temple is Li.
There are three reasons:
First, it is possible to find the tomb of the Western Zhou Dynasty as far away as the Tang Dynasty in such a hidden place, and it is found that there is a dark tomb, unless it is a feng shui master like Li, or a captain who has considerable attainments, such as being fascinated by the original author.
However, Hu Bayi just guessed what was hidden in the grave, and he didn't confirm his guess until he saw it with his own eyes.
Moreover, although Hu Bayi understood and used the sixteen-character mystery of Yin and Yang, he probably wouldn't have seen a tomb of the Western Zhou Dynasty in the gully of Longling if it weren't for the fishbone temple above.
Second, the tuibei diagram and the keel gobbledygook in the tomb are a hint.
As we all know, it is Li and Yuan Tiangang who perform sixty-four hexagrams and push back diagrams. Professor Sun said that Li has a dragon-bone gobbledygook in his hand.
So, these two things were found in the Tang tomb under the fishbone temple, indirectly telling the audience that this is Li's tomb. When he found that the Western Zhou Tomb was built on the built-in tomb, he thought of using the geomantic omen of the Western Zhou Tomb to build his own cemetery, and using the built-in tomb to build exquisite armymen, which made most people covet him? Baby? Grave robbers died here.
Third, the armillary sphere and the main tomb were designed according to Taoist magic. Isn't it strange to see Du Jing dead? Eight doors, if there is no thorough study of Taoism, can not be designed at all, let alone built.
Of course, the tomb owner's wish is not the result of his lifelong research, such as the map pushed back, such as the record of dust beads in the keel gobbledygook, which will never see the light of day. But with many tests, let the capable and not greedy person use his own knowledge to crack his organs and then leave here with his beloved things.
It can be seen that the creator's intention of Longling Cave is to make us believe that Li's tomb is under the Fishbone Temple. The reason why I didn't make it clear is that there is indeed Li in history, and the exact location of his cemetery is not in Gulan County.
As a novel, Longling Cave only needs to fully express the story it wants to tell. As for whether the tomb under the fishbone temple is Li's, this is not the most important thing at all. The audience thought it was, but it wasn't. Are you right?