Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional virtues - Allusion to sending wine in white clothes Allusion to sending wine in white clothes
Allusion to sending wine in white clothes Allusion to sending wine in white clothes
1. Tao Yuanming, an outstanding poet of the Eastern Jin Dynasty, was a good drinker, but he couldn't buy wine regularly because his family was poor. One year, during the Chung Yeung Festival, he was y distressed by the lack of wine, so he went to the chrysanthemum hedge next to his house to pick flowers and sat on the edge of the hedge for a long time. At that time, Wang Hong, the assassin of Jiangzhou, sent his white clothes to deliver wine to him, so he happily went over to pick up the wine and drank it until he was drunk, and then he was helped to go home by others. Later on, people would use this allusion to describe a friend who delivered exactly what he desired, and who fulfilled one's wish in the snow. One year during the Chung Yeung Festival, he (Tao Yuanming) was enjoying the chrysanthemums under the fence on the east side of his house, playing the zither and singing, when he broke through his addiction to wine, but unfortunately there was no wine in the house for the festival, so he had to walk slowly among the chrysanthemums and picked a large handful of chrysanthemums, and sat down beside the fence beside his house to feel despondent. Suddenly looked up and saw a man dressed in white, brought wine, asked and realized that he was the Jiangzhou assassin Wang Hong sent to send wine messenger. It turned out that the court repeatedly to recruit Tao Yuanming as an official, he did not agree, Wang Hong wanted to get to know him, has repeatedly sent wine to Tao Yuanming. This time, Tao Yuanming was so happy to see the wine that he immediately opened the wine jar and drank freely among the flowers. Drunken and poetic, he recited the famous poem "September Leisurely Dwelling". The story of "Tao Gong singing chrysanthemum" and "white clothes to send wine" has also become a favorite allusion of later generations of literati.
2, white clothes send wine, Chinese idiom, pinyin is bái yī sòng jiǔ, meaning the story of King Hong of the Jin Dynasty who sent a white-clothed envoy to send wine to Tao Qian. Later, it refers to something that one's heart longs for, and a friend delivers it instantly, getting charcoal in the snow to fulfill one's heart's desire. It is also used to sing about chrysanthemums, drinking wine, and so on. From "The Book of Song - Volume Ninety-Two - The Biography of Tao Qian".
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