Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - Seek a idiom story or fable drama script, not too long 10 to 15 minutes on the good, props and so on the best less la. I'm sorry, but I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to do this!

Seek a idiom story or fable drama script, not too long 10 to 15 minutes on the good, props and so on the best less la. I'm sorry, but I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to do this!

One-act play

Three Eight Twenty-Three

(Based on Xu Jingde's "The Benevolent Confucius"

Xie Yiping Lu Qun

Time: Spring and Autumn Period of China

Place: Confucius' apartment

Characters: Confucius: male, forty to fifty years old, educator.

Zhongyu: male, in his twenties, a scholar and a student of Confucius.

Buyer: male, in his thirties, tycoon.

Set: Confucius' apartment, there is a scheme in the center of the apartment, and there are several books and slips on the scheme.

Curtain: Confucius is sitting cross-legged behind the case, reading the scrolls. Strokes his beard and smiles.

BUYER: (hurriedly on the floor) (loudly) Mr. Kong, Mr. Kong, judge us, judge us

!

Zhong Yu: (carrying a helmet, followed by the buyer) Teacher, please judge for us!

Confucius: (puzzled) You guys? What reasoning? What kind of reasoning?

Zhong Yu: (confidently) Just now, the students heard him (the buyer) and the seller arguing in the marketplace, and the seller

said that the seller said thirty-eight, twenty-four, and asked him to pay twenty-four dollars. But he insisted that he would say thirty-eight and twenty-three and give only twenty-three each. The students went to

advise him that three eight is twenty-four, let him give enough money, he simply do not listen to ......

Buyer: (grabbed the head of the conversation) what simply do not listen to? The three eight is twenty-three well, why let me give more money!

Buyer, Zhong Yu (Qi): Mr. Kong (teacher), is it three eight twenty-three, or three eight twenty-four? Please

you rule for us.

Confucius: This is simple ......

Buyer: Mr. Confucius, you can't take sides with your student, we made a bet!

Confucius: Huh? Bet? What kind of bet?

Zhong Yu: If it's thirty-eight twenty-three, I'll lose my helmet to him (pointing to the helmet)!

Buyer: If it's three-eighty-twenty-four, I'll lose my head to him (turns his hand around his neck)!

Buyer, Zhongyu (Qi): Mr. Kong (Teacher), we ask you to determine the winner!

Confucius: (difficultly) this ...... let me think about it. (Thinking for a moment, turning his back) (solemnly, slowly

) Zhongyu, you lost ......

Zhongyu: (full of doubts) What? I lost? I ......

Buyer: Ha, I won! Bring the helmet!

Zhong Yu: (reluctant, even more unconvinced) Teacher, this, this ......

Buyer: (walks up to Zhong Yu) What? You're still not convinced?

Confucius: (heavily) Zhongyu, give the helmet to others!

Buyer: (grabbed the helmet) I am very wise! (happily)

Zhong Yu: (puzzled) Teacher, how come I lost?

Confucius: Can I rule you win? Think about it, if you lose, the helmet is still available. What if he loses?

Zhong Yu: I see! (looks up at the window, thinking)

The voice: At this point, Zhongyu realized that the highest standard of the teacher's judgment is "benevolence and love".

(End of the play)

Attached to the original text

The Compassionate Confucius

Xu Jingde

One day, Confucius's disciple, Zhongyu, saw two men arguing over the purchase of an eight-foot onyx in a marketplace. The seller said, "Three

eight and twenty-four, why don't you give enough money?" The buyer said, "It's obviously three eight twenty-three, why do you charge more

money?" Zhong Yu, a man of integrity and enthusiasm, went over to the buyer of the Lu Onyx and said with a smile, "Thirty-eight should be twenty

four. It is you who are wrong, give enough money with others!" The man who bought the onyx was not convinced and wanted to make a bet with Zhong Yu. Zhong Yu was so impatient that he wagered on the helmet he had just bought; the buyer of the onyx was even more furious, and was willing to wager on his own head.

The two men agreed to bet on the helmet. Both agreed that Confucius' ruling should prevail.

After listening to their narrative, Confucius laughed and said to Zhong Yu, "You lost, give the helmet to the other man!" Zhong Yu was dumbfounded

and watched the buyer of the Lu Onyx walk away with his helmet. Zhong Yu was baffled by Confucius' ruling

and said, "Teacher, it's obvious that it's three-eighty-twenty-four, so how can you say that I've lost?" Confucius laughed and said, "If you lose

, the helmet can be bought again; but what if the one who bought the Lu Onyx loses?" Zhong Yu realized that the teacher ruled like this

because "benevolence and love" is the greatest reason.