Fortune Telling Collection - Fortune-telling birth date - What is the center of the fourth rule in Yuewei Caotang Notes?

What is the center of the fourth rule in Yuewei Caotang Notes?

There is no theme. The title of this book is Notes, and most of the contents come from my own experience or from people around me. Most people remember the name and identity of the speaker, unlike Liaozhai, not a ghost fox. It's just that Mr. Ji prefers to comment on right and wrong, good and evil in the back, which weakens the feeling of "recording". Moreover, the author is very proud of his poems, so he certainly likes to record and taste them. This book records all kinds of poems about ghosts and gods, poems naturally growing on stones, poems on vessels, and especially "poems written by various gods". Judging from the two poems here, they are written about the scenes of suffering through a long night. The style of writing is so desolate. For Ji Xiansen, who believes in the ghost fox theory, he must feel like a wandering soul falling into the nether world. Such an interesting thing is well written, of course, it should be recorded.

The second one is nothing. From other stories, we can know that Ji Xiansen also believed in omens and fortune-telling, especially when he wrote that he was exiled to Urumqi and returned to Beijing. In addition, ancient fortune-telling and prayer are very obscure. Going to the temple to ask for a sign is all kinds of allusions, symbols, homophones and spellings. If it is to be open, it is equivalent to a high-end word game. So this paragraph is like "I heard a riddle from my grandfather, and I can't guess it, so I'll write it out for you."