Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - The origin of divination

The origin of divination

The wedge of Ghost in the Pot in Yuan Dynasty: "My children met Jia in Changshi, who was a divination teacher." Pan Jinlian looked forward to Ximen Qing's description of Pan Jinlian in the secular novel Jin Ping Mei in the middle of Ming Dynasty: "Take off two red embroideries on your feet with thin hands and try to play an acacia divination to see if Ximen Qing will come." The fourth episode of "Biography of Marriage in Awakening the World" in the late Ming and early Qing Dynasties: "The snake in Chao panicked, the temple in Yue begged for a sign, and the bird played divination in front of the palace and told the blind to tell fortune." Qu Youyuan's poem "You must make your enemies clear": "You don't have to tell fortune, and you don't have to ask God to predict."