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"Ten thousand fish dare not go to the emperor, and long live the king who only catches dragons." What are the allusions?

The allusion is: the fishing incident between Emperor Gao and his courtiers. Jie Jin was a red man around Emperor Gao of Ming Taizu, and the emperor appreciated his intelligence very much.

He reacted quickly in different situations and understood the emperor's thoughts quickly. Every time Ming Taizu is unhappy, Jie Jin always has a way to make him happy.

Extended data

Among them, "ten thousand fish dare not go to the emperor, long live the king only catches the dragon" is a doggerel written by Jie Jin to please Zhu Yuanzhang.

Jie Jin said:

Real name: Jie Jin.

Posthumous title: Xie Jieyuan, Xie Xueshi.

Font size: word big gentry, word gentry, spring rain, hi yi

Time: Ming Dynasty

Ethnic group: Han nationality

Birthplace: Jishui, Ji 'an District, Jiangxi Province

Date of birth:1369 65438+February 6th.

Time of death:1465438+February 22, 2005.

Main works: Collection of Xie Xueshi and Jade Carving of Tianhuang.

Main achievements: presided over the compilation of Yongle Dadian.

Official position: Cabinet record, right Chunfang college student.

Posthumous title: Wen Yi.

Anecdotal allusions:

Yimen Sanjin city

In the twentieth year of Hongwu (1387), Jie Jin took part in the provincial examination for the first time and won the first place in one fell swoop, which was known as "Xiejieyuan" in history. The next year, he went to Beijing to take the exam and ranked seventh. After palace examination, he was recorded as a second-class scholar. Huang Jinhua, his brother and brother-in-law of Xie Lunhe, also joined the Bangdeng Jinshi.

How did Xie Yuan, a genius who was famous since childhood, get the seventh place? Facts have proved that Jie Jin's articles are magnificent and sharp. Originally, the examiner hoped that he would be the "top scholar". However, other examiners thought that Jie Jin's remarks in the article were too sharp and afraid of causing trouble, so he deliberately ranked Jie Jin seventh.

Although Jie Jin passed by the top scholar, the news that the Xie Shi family was "brothers with the same rank" and "a top scholar with three ranks" immediately caused a sensation in Jishui, Jie Jin's hometown, and also in Nanjing, which was a great event for a while. This time, Ren Hengtai, as the first scholar in the imperial examination, achieved far less in later generations than Jie Jin.

Reference from: Baidu Encyclopedia-Jie Jin