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Ancient poetry with a martial arts flavor

1. Kill one person in ten steps, and leave no trace in a thousand miles.

Li Bai's "Xia Ke Xing" is so famous that the hero Jin Yong actually named the book after a poem. Friends who love martial arts must read it. Among them, "Kill one person in ten steps, and leave no trace in a thousand miles." "It describes the superb martial arts of the chivalrous man, and the following "When the matter is over, he brushes off his clothes and hides his body and fame" is the ultimate in indifference to fame and fortune.

Ten years of sharpening a sword, but the frost blade has never been tested.

It is incredible that Jia Dao, who likes to think deeply, actually wrote a poem like "The Swordsman". Could it be that all the people in the Tang Dynasty had knights in their hearts? Everyone dreams of upholding justice for others, and when they see injustice on the road, they draw their swords to test the frost edge.

3. Why don’t men bring Wu hooks and collect the fifty states in Guanshan?

Li He's "Thirteen Poems in Nanyuan" combines the pain of family and country with the sorrow of life experience. This poem is full of heroic sentiments and majestic momentum. Whenever there is a national crisis, it is the best poem to inspire men.

4. The peach blossom looks for the swordsman, silently laughing at the spring breeze.

This poem comes from "Ode to the Ancients" by Shi Daoyan in the Song Dynasty. The whole poem is simple but intriguing. The last two sentences are "I haven't returned home with my old age, and I live in the east of Haimen." The swordsman peach blossom, this is what is called Be chivalrous and tender.