Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - A Collection of Exercise Questions from The Letter of Fu Lei for the Secondary School Examination

A Collection of Exercise Questions from The Letter of Fu Lei for the Secondary School Examination

Fu Lei's Letter in which Fu Lei gives advice to Fu Cong when he is in a hurry to fulfill a task that prevents him from studying normally, and the advice he gives to him is to rely on his own firm will and stance, and politely but forcefully fight for it from the leaders.

The publication of Fu Lei's Letters was a sensational cultural event at the time, and has been a bestseller for more than thirty years. It is a collection of letters written by Mr. and Mrs. Fu Lei to their son, Fu Cong, and daughter-in-law, Meera, between 1954 and May 1966, edited by their second son, Fu Min.

The letters begin in 1954, when Fu Cong left home to study in Poland, and end in 1966, when Mr. and Mrs. Fu Lei, unable to cope with the abuse of the Cultural Revolution, both killed themselves. Twelve years of correspondence hundreds of letters, through the Fu Cong study abroad, playing fame to marriage and children of the growth experience, reflecting Fu Lei's work as a translator, friends and Fu Lei's family's destiny ups and downs. Mr. and Mrs. Fu Lei are very careful, their son's letters are properly collected, and the key contents are categorized and transcribed into a book.

Fu Lei said the letters he wrote to his son served a variety of purposes:

One, to discuss art.

Two, to stimulate the feelings of young people.

Three, to train Fu Cong and Fu Min in writing and thinking.

Four, be a faithful "mirror". The content of the letter, in addition to the trivialities of life, more is to talk about art and life, instilling an artist should be noble sentiments, so that his son knows "the honor and disgrace of the country, the dignity of the arts," to do a "virtues and arts, personality excellence of the artist.