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Which chapter of "Water Margin" is Lu's "Pulling up weeping willows"?
In the seventh time of the Water Margin, the flower monk pulled out the weeping willow: Lu was looking at the vegetable garden in Suoguo Temple, and someone came to make trouble in the vegetable garden. The two leaders were kicked into the cesspit, and the troublemakers begged for mercy. The next day, those people bought food and wine as gifts for Lu. Everyone had a good time. The crows in the tree outside the door kept barking. The troublemakers want to move ladders to tear down the bird's nest. Lu took off his coat, hugged the trunk with his left hand and held the upper part of the trunk with his right hand. The tree was uprooted.

Water Margin? Shi Naian wrote it? According to the folk stories of Sung River Uprising. The book tells the story of the revolt of heroes in Liangshanpo at the end of the Northern Song Dynasty, which reproduces the whole process of peasant uprising in feudal times from occurrence, development to failure. He created the heroic images of Song Jiang, Li, Li, Lin Chong and Lu. It is one of the excellent novels in ancient China. When American woman writer Pearl Buck translated it into English, she named it "All men are brothers within the four seas".

Lu, formerly known as Lu Da, is a "flower monk" in posthumous title. His dharma name is Zhishen, and he was also called Lu Tihai because he was a magistrate. Living in the Northern Song Dynasty. He is eight feet long, with a wide face, big ears and a straight nose. Generous, hateful, generous and straightforward. In the Water Margin, he ranks 13th among the 100 single generals, and is a lone star with an asterisk. After his death, he went after Yi Liezhao and Zen Master.