Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - Word for word, a hundred schools of thought contend, all kinds of allusions, chickens and dogs restless, chickens and dogs ascend to heaven.

Word for word, a hundred schools of thought contend, all kinds of allusions, chickens and dogs restless, chickens and dogs ascend to heaven.

Meaningless

Allusion: Gu Ligao's Midwinter: "Guo Laosan was caught in the county government. Without saying anything, he beat a hundred villains first."

undoubted

Allusion: Song Liuguo's "Go to Jiankang Prison Wu Jufu": "Although there are hundreds of people, don't fight."

various

Allusion: Sun Jiagan, a new knowledge at the beginning of jade: "On the west of the dragon symbol, the peaks are chaotic, and the four columns are like Pingsha Wanmu, with eight doors and five flowers."

Five Flower Fingers: Jin Juhua —— A metaphor of a woman selling tea. ?

Kapok-a metaphor for a singer in a restaurant. ?

Pyracantha-a juggler's metaphor. ?

Local cowflowers-metaphor for some porters.

Narcissus-a metaphor for a singer in a restaurant

Eight fingers: a towel-fortune telling. ?

Two skins-selling herbs. ?

Tricolor-juggling. ?

Four doors hanging-Jianghu artists. ?

Wu Menping-Storyteller and Storyteller. ?

Six-door combination-street singer. ?

Seven-tone-paper-bound. ?

Eight-door chat-singing opera on high platform. ?

Referred to as towel, leather, color, hanging, flat, group, tone and chat, it is called "eight doors"

Even poultry and dogs can't be at peace ― it's such a complete mess that everyone is nervous.

In the Tang Dynasty, a writer named Liu Zongyuan wrote a famous article called Snake Catcher, which described such a story:

There is a man named Jiang. His grandfather and father were killed by snakes while catching snakes, but he continued to catch snakes. When Liu Zongyuan advised him not to catch snakes, the man burst into tears and would rather be killed than give up catching snakes. Because he had to catch snakes to pay government taxes. The snake catcher surnamed Jiang also told Liu Zongyuan that if he caught a poisonous snake, his fate would be much better than that of his neighbors. Some villagers have lost their money and no food to eat. The officers went into the village to collect taxes, rampaged and shouted, and the villagers were terrified and begged. This kind of scene is not even peaceful for chickens and dogs, let alone people!

Later, people called one of them "making trouble"

It's easy for relatives and followers of senior officials to benefit from it.

Explain the legend that after Liu An, the king of Huainan in the Han Dynasty, became immortal, the rest of the medicine was left in the yard, and the chickens and dogs ate it, and it all ascended to heaven. To make a metaphor, when a person becomes an official, people who are related to him also become officials.