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In 1566 of the Ming Dynasty, Emperor Jiajing once said that he looked at a charming city. Why is the word "wei" in the crossword puzzle?

There is a beautiful woman in the north who is peerless and independent

Looking at the Qingren city and then the Qingren country

Beautiful woman = woman = good

Peerless , Independence=oneself

I can’t think of three or four sentences. It may not be one word per sentence. If you guess the first two sentences, the meaning behind it will be clear. No need to think deeply. It may be a kind of officialdom. Subtle means.

I saw this paragraph in the post bar, I hope it will be helpful to the original poster

The following is copied from the original text: /p/680987883

This charade is A combination of two guessing methods, the first two sentences are "guessing the form" and the last two sentences are "guessing the meaning".

The so-called "shaped guessing" means that it must be written in black and white so that "fans" can guess which character corresponds to it by disassembling and combining the glyphs, so there is a saying "There is a beauty in the north, peerless and independent." Guess the word "好自".

The so-called "guessing" means that you don't have to write it down in black and white, but rely on your own talent and learning to guess a higher-level meaning. Because there are two sentences at the end of Li Yannian's poem that Brother Jiajing did not write out for Xu Jie, they are:

. . . . . . I would rather not know a beautiful city or a beautiful country, no matter how rare a beauty is!

Xu Jie is a bachelor with a wealth of knowledge and talents. Naturally, he knew that there were two final sentences that Jiajing had not said. The ending of this song is also intriguing. The above article is an extreme exaggeration of the beauty of a beautiful woman, and the ending suddenly changes into words of deep regret: "Would you rather not know a beautiful city or a beautiful country? Beautiful women are hard to come by!" Beautiful women often bring you great things to you. The disaster of "beautiful city" and "overwhelming country". Are there few such examples in history? This seems to be a warning to the emperor to remember the ancient lessons of a beautiful city and a beautiful country, and not to be misled by "beautiful women". But the next sentence adds another layer of focus? Even if you have a beautiful city or a beautiful country, don’t lose the opportunity to get a beautiful woman - after all, a beautiful woman is rare in this world and can never be obtained again! These two sentences pretend to be a dilemma of choice, but they actually have the beauty of "play hard to get": the more you emphasize the inaccessibility of a beautiful woman, the more you will see her beauty; and the more you regret that a beautiful woman is rare, the more you can urge people to hurry up and get it.

The last two sentences should be Emperor Jiajing's warning to Xu Jie: Don't get involved with Chen Hong. Although you will get some sweetness temporarily by getting together with Lao Chen, you will definitely have to do it in the end. You will not be able to protect yourself in the future, so you must remember to "take care of yourself". hehe!