Road to destination idiom allusion
Source "Guoyu·Zhou Yu": "No Chinese dare to speak, the road is based on eyes."
Example
"Historical Records·Zhou Benji": " In the thirty-fourth year, Wang Yiyan, the people of the country must not dare to speak, the road is based on their eyes.”
The next thing to be careful about is “~”, let’s wait for the blind literature. (Lu Xun's "Pseudo Freedom Book·Stop Crying Literature")
Source
Story: The problem of people's grievances during the reign of King Zhou Li, one of the most famous stories in history, must be considered King Zhou Li banned slander. King Zhou Li was tyrannical in his administration. He was instigated by his favored minister Rongyi Gong to change the original system of the Zhou Dynasty and transfer many industries that the common people relied on to make a living to the royal family. For a time, the people's livelihood was difficult and the people were filled with injustice. Duke Zhao (Mugong Hu, a descendant of Duke Zhao Kang, has assisted the royal family for generations, and has a fiefdom in Zhao. Today's Qishan County, Shaanxi Province) said to King Zhou Li: The people can no longer bear it. King Li did not listen to the advice but used spy methods to deal with the people. He sent people to Weiguo (Qixian County, Henan Province) and invited many wizards to patrol the streets and alleys of the capital Haojing (west of Xi'an, Shaanxi Province) and eavesdrop on people's conversations. , whoever they accuse of being rebellious or slanderous will be imprisoned and executed. In this way, the whole country no longer dares to comment on state affairs. Even when they meet each other, they do not talk randomly, but follow the road. King Zhou Li happily said to Duke Zhao: I can unify my thoughts and no one will dare to talk nonsense anymore. Taking this opportunity, Zhao Gong made a sage speech that was often quoted by later generations: "You are forcing the people to shut their mouths. The people really don't have their own ideas. You know, guarding the people's mouths is better than guarding the people's mouths." Fang Chuan. If the river chokes and collapses, many people will be hurt. The same applies to the people!" Of course, King Zhou Li couldn't listen to this, but the people still dared not speak out.
Three years later (842 BC), the civilians finally couldn't bear it and spontaneously organized themselves into the palace and exiled the tyrant to a place called Zhi (now part of Shanxi). This incident is known as the "Chinese riot" in history.
"Killing innocent people is harsh." King Zhou Li's posthumous title "Li" summarizes his history of killing people and stopping slander.
Essays
Basic information
Author: Zhang Ailing
Issue: Original issue of "Heaven and Earth" monthly magazine No. 4, January 1944, Income "Rumors".
About the author: Zhang Ailing, a modern Chinese writer. Zhang Ailing, whose real name is Zhang Ying, was born in a imitation Western-style mansion built in the late Qing Dynasty at No. 313 Megen Road in the West District of Shanghai Public Concession. Zhang Ailing's family background is prominent. Her grandfather Zhang Peilun was a famous official in the late Qing Dynasty, and her grandmother Li Jucou was the eldest daughter of Li Hongzhang, an important official in the imperial court. Zhang Ailing created a large number of literary works throughout her life. Genres include novels, essays, film scripts, and literary treatises, and her letters have also been studied as part of the body of work. In 1944, Zhang Ailing met the writer Hu Lancheng and dated her. In 1973, Eileen Chang settled in Los Angeles. On September 8, 1995, Eileen Chang's landlord found her dead in her apartment on Rochester Avenue in Westwood, California. She was 75 years old. Her death was caused by arteriosclerosis and cardiovascular disease.
Excerpts from the article
The woman's woolen cedar on the road, because her hands were kept in the bag for a long time, falling down, the front was elongated, but the back was shrunk. The back view is very unsightly.
"Sima Zhao's heart is known to everyone on the street." The term "passer-by" in the United States is a colloquial term that specifically represents "ordinary people". When journalists advocate something or attack something, they often point out "passers-by": "Even passers-by know..." "What passers-by know" is often something passers-by never dreamed of.
When looking at people on the road, people cannot help but look back and cannot observe them calmly. It is also easy to make them obediently look at without daring to look back. There are few people in the world who "look from the head to the feet, and the wind flows downward; from the feet to the head, the wind flows upward." Ordinary people have this kind of self-awareness, so they can't stand your quick glances from head to toe several times, and they feel weak and lower their eyes. There is another way. Just staring at their feet is enough to scare them. Are their socks on inside out? Do the shoes look like they are made of fake leather? Are your feet a bit splayed? What's the character? When I was a child, I heard an old woman from Hefei describe her experience of hunting wolves in the countryside. She said that wolves have "copper heads, iron backs, and hemp straw legs." Therefore, the head and back are all very resistant, but the four legs are useless. Human psychological weakness also seems to be concentrated in the lower limbs.
There is a military camp nearby. I have been working hard to learn to play the trumpet day and night, but I have made little progress so far. It is said that it is a distressing and annoying sound, but I don't find it annoying at all. Great music is independent from the world, and all perfect things belong to the realm of superman. Only in perfect skills can the tired "human element" that is busy all day long get a moment of rest. In unskilled crafts, there are struggles, worries, panics, and risks, so the "human element" is particularly strong. I like it because "there is someone in it, ready to come out."
The same goes for beginners learning the tones of the huqin. I also like to listen to his tentative and intermittent babble when he tunes the strings. Lafan Yulin, a beginner, is an exception.
That sharp, zigzag sound is really like killing a chicken