Second,? High mountains and flowing water, you can't listen unless you have a confidant, which is a famous saying of Wen Tianxiang, a patriotic poet in the Southern Song Dynasty.
Third, "Mountain Flowing Water" comes from Liezi Tang Wen:
1, "Boya drums and harps, aiming at climbing mountains, Zhong Ziqi said,' OK, I am as tall as Mount Tai.' Regarding flowing water, he said,' Well, the ocean is like a river.'
2. Vernacular translation: Boya is good at playing the piano and Zhong Ziqi is good at listening. When Boya plays the piano, he will think of mountains in his heart. Zhong Ziqi praised: "Well, it looks like Mount Tai!" Boya is thinking about running water. Zhong Ziqi cheered again: "Good! Vast as the Yangtze River! "
Extended data:
1 The allusion of "high mountains and flowing water" was first seen in Liezi Tang Wen. In people's practice of using allusions, this allusions has gradually developed into more than 70 allusions, such as lofty music, knowing each other well, hard to find a bosom friend, losing a bosom friend, carefree feelings and so on. And there is also the phenomenon that allusions are used backwards. ?
2. "Mountain Flowing Water", a China guqin song, belongs to one of the top ten ancient songs in China. It is said that Boya, a pianist in the pre-Qin period, once played the piano on a barren land, but Zhong Ziqi, a woodcutter, could understand that this was a description of "towering like Mount Tai" and "surging like a river". Boya was shocked: "Well, the child's heart is the same as mine." After Zhong Ziqi's death, Boya lost her bosom friend, broke the piano, and never played it for life, so there was a song of high mountains and flowing water.
3. "Mountain running water" is a metaphor for bosom friends and music. Later generations are divided into two songs: Mountain and Running Water. There is also A Zheng's song "Mountain Flowing Water" with the same name, which has no inheritance relationship with Guqin music.