Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - When did Guan Yu say such a thing: "Jade can be broken but not turned white, and bamboo can be burned but not destroyed;" "Although I am a fallen fairy, can my fame be hung on bamboo and silk?"

When did Guan Yu say such a thing: "Jade can be broken but not turned white, and bamboo can be burned but not destroyed;" "Although I am a fallen fairy, can my fame be hung on bamboo and silk?"

Out of the Romance of the Three Kingdoms, the seventy-sixth time Xu Zhanmian Shui defeated Maicheng.

This sentence was said by Guan Gong when he was defeated in Maicheng, which showed Guan Gong's unyielding integrity and a general's loyalty to his master.

Guan Yu (? -220), the word Yunchang, was born in Hedong, Xie Liang (now Yuncheng, Shanxi), and was a famous soldier in the late Eastern Han Dynasty. He followed Liu Bei in his early days and was captured by Cao Cao. He killed Yan Liang, the general of Yuan Shao, in Bai Mapo, and called him an enemy with Zhang Fei.

After Battle of Red Cliffs, Liu Bei helped Zhou Yu of Wu Dong attack Coss of the Southern Army, so he didn't send Guan Yu to the North Road to stop Cao Cao's reinforcements. After Coss retreated, Guan Yu was appointed as the prefect of Xiangyang by Liu Bei. Liu Beijin Yizhou, Guan Yu stayed in Jingzhou.

In the twenty-fourth year of Jian 'an, Guan Yu surrounded Xiangfan, and Cao Cao sent reinforcements. Guan Yu captured Yu Jin alive and killed Pound, which greatly shocked China. Cao Cao wants to move the capital to avoid its sharpness. Later, Cao Cao sent Huang Xu to reinforce, and Monroe of Soochow attacked Jingzhou. Guan Yu was caught between Scylla and Charybdis and was defeated and killed.