Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional customs - What are the characteristics of the Wolf in the classical Chinese and the Tiger in the Cave?

What are the characteristics of the Wolf in the classical Chinese and the Tiger in the Cave?

In China's classical "Wolf", the wolf is characterized by greed and cunning. On the way home, the butcher met two wolves and "threw a bone at them", but the latter wolf stopped temporarily and the former wolf came again. Until the bones are cast, the hungry wolf is not satisfied, which fully exposes the greedy nature of the wolf. When I arrived at the wheat field, I "walked all the way" and had another plot; "One dog sits in front" to contain the butcher, which shows the cunning of the wolf.

Wolf is a short story in classical Chinese written by Pu Songling, a novelist in Qing Dynasty. It depicts the image of a greedy, fierce and cunning wolf. It means that a villain like a wolf, no matter how cunning and treacherous, will eventually fail.

In China's classic Tiger Into the Cave, the tiger is characterized by fierceness and ignorance. There is no place for the tiger in the cave, but the tiger is bent on eating firewood, so he has to try his best to squeeze in. As a result, the woodcutter who climbed out of the hole blocked the hole and smoked to death.

The classical Chinese "Tiger Entering the Cave" comes from Ji Yun's Reading Notes of Yuewei Caotang: Listening to Gu Tiao in Qing Dynasty. The purpose of writing this article is to give advice to those who are in trouble.