Fortune Telling Collection - Ziwei fortune-telling - Ziweilang's explanation

Ziweilang's explanation

The explanation of Ziweilang is also called Ziweilang. Another name of China's Tang Dynasty calligrapher. Tang Bai Juyi's poem "Wei Zihua": "Who is sitting alone with dusk, Wei Zihua is opposite Wei Zilang." Wei Zhuang, a poet in the former Shu Dynasty, wrote a poem "A Message to Li Juju in the Right Province": "I have received the geese from Yuanyang and paid homage to Ziweilang twice." In the Qing Dynasty, Zhao Yi wrote the poem "Four New Engravings of Shu 'an": "Zi left blank, Wan Li retranslated from the military calendar." See "Wei Zi".

Word decomposition

The explanation of purple is the shortest wavelength in visible light, and the color of red and blue is purple. Copper. Ultraviolet rays. Purple potion. The color advocated by Taoists and rulers in some dynasties is often preceded by the word "purple" in their palaces, costumes and utensils: purple clothes. Zi Shu (. Tao Jing; Imperial edict). Purple patent (imperial edict)