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Is it "lust without praise" or "lust without praise" in Mo Mei?
In Mo Mei's place, it is "lascivious".

Supplement:

"Don't let people praise lewd" from Wang Mian's "Mo Mei", the whole poem is as follows:

The first tree in my home, West Wild Goose Lake, is full of flowers and light ink marks. ?

Don't boast about the good color, just let the air be full of dried Kun.

Mo Mei is a poem by Wang Mian, a poet and painter in Yuan Dynasty, dedicated to the plum blossoms he painted. The ink plum described in the poem is beautiful, fragrant and unique. This poem not only reflects the style of plum blossom he painted, but also reflects the author's noble taste and indifferent mind to fame and fortune, which clearly shows his firm and pure ethics and morality of not flattering the secular. One or two sentences are exquisitely conceived, and the ink plum in the painting is integrated with the Bian Mei tree in the pond, as if the faint ink halo of the ink plum in the painting is caused by the ink color absorbed by the plum tree in the pond. Three or four sentences is a slap in the face, praising Mo Mei for being fresh and elegant, although there is no eye-catching color, in order to express her independent personality ideal that she is unwilling to be kitsch.