Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - Ming dynasty emperor fortune-telling

Ming dynasty emperor fortune-telling

The word written down is "silk" At first glance, it seems ordinary. At most, it is associated with "jade", and then wealth. However, if you study it carefully, you will find that this word is really unusual, because if you disassemble it from top to bottom, you can get the words "white" and "towel", which are part of the word "emperor" respectively. It was because the fortune teller saw through this floor that he was scared and exclaimed, long live. ?

Although Zhu Yuanzhang was not an emperor at that time, it was expected that he would ascend to the throne, because his strength was the strongest among the pack at that time. Of course, he deliberately dressed in rags to tell fortune, hoping to see if God intended him to be the master of the world. As a result, after writing the word, the fortune teller hesitated first. When Zhu Yuanzhang thought that the other party could not figure out how to leave, he knelt down and exclaimed, Long live, which made Zhu Yuanzhang very happy and more confident about his accession to the throne. ?

However, how did this little story come down? Did the fortune teller tell anyone? Or did Zhu Yuanzhang reveal it himself? The former is unlikely. Zhu Yuanzhang was in rags and didn't identify himself. How did the other party know who he was? The latter is likely and motivated, just to convey to the world that he is the only thrill. This move is quite similar to the myth and legend of Emperor Gaozu's killing the white snake, and people at the end of Qin Dynasty could do it, let alone at the end of Yuan Dynasty.

What's more, the story itself may be made up by Zhu Yuanzhang himself. Where there is a fortune teller, he is not going to see someone in rags, but just wants to put a mythical color on his legitimacy. Otherwise, it is strange that a beggar-like figure in rags can make the fortune teller exclaim long live by writing a word "silk".