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What message did Zhuge Liang leave for Liu Bowen?

Zhuge Liang did not leave a word for Liu Bowen in history.

Zhuge Liang (181-23410-8) was born in Xuzhou (now yinan county, Linyi City, Shandong Province) and was an outstanding politician, strategist, diplomat, writer, calligrapher and inventor during the Three Kingdoms period.

Liu Ji (13 1 1 July1375 May 16) was a native of Nantian, qingtian county (now wencheng county, Wenzhou, Zhejiang Province), so he was called Liu Qingtian, a strategist and a native of the early Ming Dynasty.

One legend is that ...

Scholars despise each other since ancient times, especially the wise. Liu Bowen always spoke highly of ancient sages, and so did Zhuge Liang. According to legend, Zhuge Liang's tomb has never been found for thousands of years, and it is known as the first problem in the world. So Liu Bowen cracked the bureau left by Zhuge Liang and proved that he was the first wise man in the ages, so he led people to find Zhuge Liang's tomb.

Liu Bowen found Zhuge Liang's tomb by gossip. On his way to the grave, he saw a stone tablet that read: I didn't see anyone. Liu Bowen scoffed and said, "Now I have not only arrived, but also dug your grave." So he took the people forward again and met a stone tablet that said, "Only Bowen has arrived.

Liu Bowen, suddenly broke out in a cold sweat. It turned out that Zhuge Liang had arrived at his meeting thousands of years ago, leaving a stone tablet to warn himself in advance. It seems that Zhuge Liang's wisdom is unparalleled. So Liu Bowen respectfully kowtowed to the stone tablet 100 and quietly left. From then on, he never dared to mention that he was smarter than Zhuge Liang.