Mingyue said, "I stole four of them, and this monk said he wasn't a thief!" The Eight Precepts said, "Amitabha! Since you stole four, how can you only take out three to divide them, and play a partial hand in advance? "The idiot turned upside down and yelled. The second fairy boy asked the truth, and the more he cursed. He hated the big holy steel teeth biting, the fire eyes were round, and he shook and shook the golden hoop stick, endured and endured: "This boy is so hateful, just say that he beats people in front of his face, and he is angry, wait for me to give him a last resort, teach him that everyone can't eat!" ”
The above content comes from the twenty-fifth episode of "Journey to the West", "Zhen Yuanxian Rushes to Capture the Jing Monk Sun Xing's Great Trouble with the Five Zhuang Guan". The content is that Qingfeng and Mingyue confirmed that the three of them stole the ginseng fruit and scolded non-stop. And the Eight Precepts of the Pig added fuel to the fire, and it had to be said that Sun Monkey picked four fruits, divided them into three, and left one for himself. Under the impulse of sun monkey, who had suffered a double blow, he simply did not stop and cast a spell, while the real body ran to the garden, knocked down the ginseng fruit tree, and brewed a terrible disaster.
Impulse is the devil. This sentence originates from Guo Donglin and Niu Li's sketch "Manly Big Husband", which is the line used by Guo Donglin to persuade Niu Li, and the creator repeatedly points out the theme of "impulse is the devil" while using the husband and wife to jointly recall the love affair to resolve external troubles and civil wars. Throughout the ages, countless facts have proved that this sentence is really an indisputable truth.
During the Three Kingdoms period, Zhang Fei and Guan Yu were equally famous, and they were both "generals of the bears and tigers" who were "invincible to all people". He followed Liu Bei all his life, wantonly on the battlefield, born into death, and made great achievements in battle. He once fought against Ma Chao, Collect yan yan, and defeated Zhang Guo, and his eight snake spears bravely crowned the three armies. And his most famous event was the roar of Changsakapo to retreat the Cao Army millions. Unfortunately, he did not know how to sympathize with his subordinates, and often whipped soldiers drunk. Although Liu Bei had reminded him many times, he still turned a deaf ear. Later, in order to avenge Guan Yu, he ordered the manufacture of white armor within three days. Zhang Da and Fan Jiang asked for a grace period, Zhang Fei was furious, ordered the samurai to tie him to a tree, each whipped fifty, and threatened to kill the two people to show the public if they violated the deadline, so they were killed by the generals Fan Jiang and Zhang Da, and the end was like Guan Yu, and finally ended up in a different place. As far as psychology is concerned, Guan Yu's death is a curse of narcissism and arrogance, and his very famous sentence "How can a tiger girl marry a dog", although it sounds very angry and aggressive, but it is actually contrary to Zhuge Liang's instructions at that time. If it were not for his words and deeds of light enemies and impulsiveness, I am afraid that the history of the Three Kingdoms would have to be rewritten. And Zhang Fei's death, which is actually very similar to his death, is a sin created by violent impulses.
"Weeping for the Six Armies, Chong Guan's anger turned red." This poem is from the "YuanyuanQu" of the late Ming and early Qing poet Wu Weiye (Zi Jungong, No. Meicun), written in 1651 in the eighth year of Shunzhi, the story in this poem can be described as a sonic earthquake, and its male and female protagonists have since been deeply engraved on the pages of history. The heroine Chen Yuanyuan is one of the famous "Qin Huai Eight Yan" in the late Ming Dynasty, and was sought after by celebrities as soon as she debuted. Red-faced and short-lived, she was first plundered by Tian Hongyu and dedicated to the Chongzhen Emperor, but she did not expect to be favored by Chongzhen, and was later taken as a concubine by Wu Sanguina. In early April of the seventeenth year of Ming Chongzhen in 1644, Wu Sangui personally led his troops into Beijing to meet the new emperor Li Zicheng. However, on the way, he also heard that the Da Shun army had arrested a large number of high-ranking officials in Beijing, and his concubine Chen Yuanyuan had also been robbed. Legend has it that Wu Sangui was furious at that time and shouted loudly: "The eldest husband cannot protect a woman, how can he see people?" Immediately, the division returned to Shanhaiguan for the second time, surrendered and rebelled, and staged a scene of "rushing the crown and anger into a red face", which made a sweat horse contribution for the Qing court to fix the Central Plains. It seems that it is really very reasonable to say that a weak woman can change the fate of many characters, and at the same time change the direction of Chinese history.