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Seeking classic curse allusions

The landlord's question is quite interesting. I tried to say a few:

1, "Please sit down, please sit down, please sit down, tea, tea"

This is a short story by Su Shi. One day, he went to play in the mountains and passed a temple. He went in to have a rest. The old monk in the temple is quite snobbish. When he saw Su Shi's simple clothes, he felt that he was just an ordinary person and his words were cold. He simply said, "Sit down, disciple, tea."

After the two men sat down to talk, Su Shi was well-spoken and personable. The old monk was secretly surprised and polite. He sat Su Shi in the main hall and moved a chair by himself. "Disciple, please sit down and have tea."

The two chatted for a while, and Su Shi's words were eloquent and interesting. The old monk admired him deeply. When he asked Su Shi's name, he realized that this is a world-famous Su University. He quickly invited Su Shi to the inner hall and repeatedly said, "Please sit down, disciple, and worship fragrant tea quickly."

Sushi was disgusted with the old monk's respect and got up to leave, but the old monk repeatedly asked Su Shi to leave him a handwriting. Su Shi refused, but he wrote a couplet: "Please sit down, please sit down, tea, tea." Secretly sarcastic.

2. "If you want to be a gentleman, you must be a gentleman."

This is a short story by Kong Rong, a magistrate in Beihai at the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty. He is famous for being a pear at the age of four. This year, he went to Luoyang with his father. One day, on a whim, he went to visit Li Yuanli, a famous scholar at that time. The doorman wouldn't let him in, so he said, "I'm an old friend of Lee's." So I met Li Yuanli smoothly. Li asked him, "Do we have friendship?" Kong Rong replied tactfully: "My ancestor Confucius once asked your ancestor Lao Zi (that is, Li Er) for a gift, so I and adults are old friends."

Everyone present, including Li Yuanli, marveled at Kong Rong's resourcefulness, but a guest named Chen Yi disagreed and sarcastically said, "It's time, but it's not necessarily good to be older." Don't look at this boy now, maybe he will disappear when he grows up. Kong Rong immediately said, "If you want to be a gentleman, you must be a gentleman." You're right. I think you must have been very clever when you were a child. This move was just right, which made Chen Yi lose face.

"The dusty surface 30 years ago has now become a blue sarong."

In the first year of the Tang Dynasty, King Jinshi told a story that when he was young, his family was poor and he lived in a temple in Yangzhou to review his lessons and prepare to take part in the scientific research. Over time, the monks in the temple were very disgusted with this person who was busy reading all day and didn't give birth to a freeloader. One day, they tried to fool him. Because the temple began to ring the bell, so the monks deliberately rang the bell after dinner. Wang Bo heard the bell and went to the canteen, only to find the leftovers left. Li Yue is the name of a monk.

Later, Wang Bo studied hard, finally admitted to the Jinshi, and was sent to Yangzhou as an official. After he took office, he revisited his hometown and came to the temple where he lived. At this time, all he saw was the monk's flattery, and even the two poems he wrote when he was down and out were protected by the monk. Wang Bo was very emotional, so he began to write two more sentences: "Thirty years ago, the dusty surface made a green gauze cage." It's a little ironic.

4. "The frog in the well wears a green coat, and the crab in the soup wears a red robe."

This is the story of Jie Jin, a gifted scholar in the Ming Dynasty. When he was young, he was famous for his familiarity with poetry and writing articles, especially for antithesis. Once, a minister heard about his deeds and specially called him to the palace to take an exam. Jie Jin, who went to the appointment, wore a green coat. Shangshu said, "A frog in a well wears a green coat." Seeing that Shangshu was wearing a red robe, Jie Jin said, "The crab in the soup is wearing a red robe." Of course, the two later appreciated each other and became bosom friends.

5. "Hong Fan is here to destroy the Song Dynasty."

Zhang Hongfan is a real Han Chinese. He was born in Baoding, Hebei Province in the Northern Song Dynasty. Later, the Jin Dynasty destroyed the Northern Song Dynasty, and his father took refuge in the Jin Dynasty. Later, Jin was destroyed by Mongolia. Because of his outstanding military ability, Zhang Hongfan became the vanguard general of Mongolian general Bo Yan and marched south to the Song Dynasty. He staged the tragedy of Han people beating Han people. However, Zhang Hongfan was not ashamed. Instead, he proudly wrote in a poem: "Our army always asks for red robes." When Zhang Hongfan defeated Zhang Shijie's water army in the Battle of Cliff Mountain and completely wiped out the Southern Song Dynasty, he even wrote the words "Zhang Hongfan destroyed the Song Dynasty here" on a stone on the Cliff Mountain.

More than a hundred years later, Zhu Yuanzhang, a Han Chinese, rose up, expelled the Tatars and restored the Han Chinese country. There is a scholar who once traveled to the cliff mountain and saw Zhang Hongfan's handwriting. He was filled with indignation and added the word "Song" to his pen. This sentence became "Hong Fan ruined the Song Dynasty here" and became a wonderful satire on traitors.

6. "Four hundred and eighty halls in southern dynasties, several towers in misty rain"

This is two lines of a poem by Du Mu, a poet in the Tang Dynasty. Allusions are related to the Southern Liang Emperor Xiao Yan in the Northern and Southern Dynasties. Although he managed the country well, he was criticized by later generations for his passion for Buddhism and was named "Monk Emperor". In the later period of his reign, he even staged several farce of becoming a monk in a temple, and even asked ministers to take money to redeem it, which cost as much as 400 million yuan before and after, and the state affairs were gradually abandoned.

Du Mu lived in the middle Tang Dynasty, which was also a period of great and even vicious development of Buddhism. Therefore, Du Mu himself has an antipathy to Buddhism, which makes him quite critical of Liang Wudi, who is famous for "worshipping Buddhism". Therefore, in this poem, the first two sentences describe the scenery in the south of the Yangtze River, while the last two sentences do the opposite, showing his admiration for the huge scale of the temple, and actually alluding to the absurdity of Xiao Yan's blind belief in Buddhism.