Shuai Ke, an ordinary soldier from ordinary people, is simple and honest, straightforward, humorous and clever, with a smile. He bluffed out all the orders of his superiors and skillfully used the loopholes in the military law, which made all these orders look ridiculous and made his superiors feel ridiculous and helpless.
He embarrassed the dignified royal family, dignitaries, generals, police, respected judges and priests with no effort, and made many gaffes. Shuaike suffered from rheumatism and was declared by the jury of the military region to have a chronic disease of neurological dysfunction. He retired and went home to make a living by selling dogs.
Extended data:
Creation background
1620 After the Battle of Baishan, the Czech nation entered a "dark age" that lasted for 300 years. In the long struggle, the people oppressed by foreigners formed a tortuous and tenacious resistance through laughing, cursing and humor.
As Russian critic Dobro Lyubov said, "Literature permeates the people's spirit." Shuaike in Hasek is a special example of the Czech people's resistance to foreign rule, a representative figure who has been cultivated and grown up by the Czech people for hundreds of years and resisted national oppression and unjust wars in a certain period of time at a disadvantage.
19 1 1 year, the Austro-Hungarian Empire held parliamentary elections, and the cynical Hasek once claimed to set up a political party called "Moderate and Peaceful Constitutional Progress Party". In the same year, Hasek published his first batch of Tales of Shuaike.
Although his four-volume Shuai Ke Hao Bing was written in 192 1 year, the creativity of the novel and the design of characters should be said to have originated from the first batch of Shuai Ke stories in 19 1 1 year. This elite soldier, known as "Shi Kaichang", is probably the humorous embodiment of his "moderate and peaceful constitutional progressive party" program.
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