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What does it mean to be a willing ox?

"Look at a thousand fingers coldly, bow down and be a willing ox" is an idiom in China. Pronunciation is héng méI lěng du qiān f zhǐ, fǔ shǒu gān wéi rú zǐ niú, which means never giving in to the enemy and willing to serve the people.

Eyebrows: glare.

Everyone complains.

A willing servant is one who never gives in to the enemy and is willing to serve the people.

"Bow your head a thousand fingers, bow your head and be a willing ox." This poem is written by Lu Xun, a great writer, thinker and revolutionary in China.

Mr. Lu Xun once said, "bow your head and be a willing ox", which is Mr. Lu Xun's ambition and position. At the same time, this should also be our ambition and position now.

In front of the people, what we hate are reactionaries, bureaucratic bourgeois counter-revolutionaries, corrupt officials who still hold the people's power, and the so-called "censure" of reactionaries.

Lu Xun's pen is too sharp. One of his pens is really worth a thousand troops. Now it is also cold and sharp to read.

His pen not only killed the ugliness and darkness of his time, but in our modern times, this sword still shines with sharp light, and it will kill all bad habits and crooked ways.

Extended data

Lu Xun (188 1 September 25th-19361October19) once took the name Zhou Zhangshou, later renamed Zhou Shuren, once took the name Yushan, later changed to Yucai, and studied at Sendai Medical College (dropped out).

"Lu Xun" is the pseudonym he used when he published Diary of a Madman on 19 18, and it is also his most influential pseudonym, from Shaoxing, Zhejiang.

Mr. Lu Xun is a famous writer, thinker and democratic fighter in China, an important participant in the May 4th New Culture Movement and the founder of modern literature in China.

Mao Zedong once commented: "Lu Xun's direction is the direction of the new culture of the Chinese nation."

References:

Baidu encyclopedia-bow one thousand fingers, bow one's head and be a willing ox

References:

Baidu Encyclopedia-Lu Xun