Chief Horn: A young man between the ages of 8 or 9 and 13 or 14. In ancient times, children divided their hair into two halves and tied them into a knot at the top of their heads, which resembled two ram's horns, hence the name "total horn".
The Book of Songs has: "The feast of the total horn, speech and laughter." Total, gather bunch; horn, bun, meaning to receive the knot. In ancient times, children divided their hair into two halves, each tied into a knot at the top of the head, in the shape of two horns, so it is called "total horn". Also use "total horn" to refer to the childhood stage of people.
Expanded InformationIf a child leaves his hair down without tying it up, it is called tufts of hair. The word "tufts" refers to the drooping hair of a child, which is why it is called "tufts of hair" in reference to a young child or childhood. The most familiar one is Tao Yuanming's "Records of the Peach Blossom Garden": "Yellow hair hangs down on the children, and they are happy with themselves."
A recent writer, Yu Dafu, wrote in Qingdao Miscellaneous Poems, No. 6: "I am sad to shake hands with the old man, but I still remember the time when I had tufts of hair on my head." In ancient times, when a woman reached the age of fifteen, her hair was tied and she was given a hairpin, so it was said that when a woman reached the age of fifteen, she had reached the age of maturity.