Learning really makes one's knowledge increase, for example, in the second paragraph of Qiyu, "Crossing the drunken eyes, twisting the beard", when I saw this line my mind came up with a person who is drunkenly looking at people cross-eyed, twisting the beard and chanting poems, but I didn't realize that there is a source, which is from the two Tang poems.
[Translation]
Gold and jade are opposite each other, treasures and pearls are opposite each other, the moon and the sun are opposite each other. A lonely boat is opposite to a short boat-rig, a lone goose is opposite to two wild ducks. Horizontally with drunken eyes and twirling his beard to recite poetry, Li Bai, the great poet of the Tang Dynasty, and Yang Zhu, the philosopher of the Warring States period, are opposite to each other. At the time of frost in the fall, the geese in the north began to fly to the south one after another, and the cuckoo crows chirped in the branches under the moonlight at night. The wind and said warm, grass and trees in spring, flowers everywhere; snow, wind and cold, the village is far away, it is difficult to buy good wine. Lingnan people, good at probing to find elephants buried off the teeth, the lower reaches of the Yangtze River west of the people, will be in the legs of the dragon asleep by chance to get its jaws of the treasure beads.
[Notes]
Jade Rabbit : Legend has it that there is a white rabbit pounding medicine in the moon, so the Jade Rabbit is used to refer to the moon.
Golden Crow: Legend has it that there is a three-legged crow in the sun, so the golden crow refers to the sun
Chuo (棹) (音zhào): Oars and other rowing tools; it can also be used to refer to a boat and rowing boat.
凫(音fú): wild ducks and other waterfowl.
Crossing drunken eyes, twisting the whiskers: both from a Tang poem. "
Drunken Eyes is from a Tang poem by Li Dong: "Drunken eyes are small in the blue sky, and the feeling for the mountains is low in the sky."
"Twisting the whiskers" is from Lu Yanjian's "Bitter Chant": "Chanting a word in peace, twisting off several whiskers."
Yang Zhu: a native of Wei during the Warring States period, a thinker who advocated "love of self" and was a highly influential school of thought among the Warring States scholars. Yang Zhu and Li Bai relative, both relative to the name of the person, but also a borrowed pair , "Yang" to "Li" is relative to the plant, "Zhu" to The "Yang" to "Li" is the plant relative, "Zhu" to "Bai" is the color relative.
Lingnan: south of the Five Ridges mountain range, that is, the area of present-day Guangdong and Guangxi.
Jiangzuo: the area east of the lower reaches of the Yangtze River, i.e., around present-day Jiangsu.
LIXI ( 骊(音lí)龙: Black dragon. According to "Zhuangzi - Lianyukou", the precious pearl worth a thousand pieces of gold must be hidden under the jaw (音hàn) of the LIXIL dragon in the abyss.