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Qiu Jin’s famous sayings

1. The revolution will only succeed if it sheds blood. The spirit of the knight-errant has become the traditional resource of Qiu Jin and other revolutionaries. His spirit of charity and wealth has become the ambition of revolutionaries to save the world. His spirit of not fearing death has become the quality of revolutionaries who have the courage to sacrifice. Like Tan Sitong, after the news of the uprising leaked, someone went to Shaoxing to inform Qiu Jin and persuade her to go to Shanghai. Qiu Jin resolutely refused and said: "I will not come out for the revolution because I am afraid of death. The revolution will only succeed if it sheds blood. If Manchu can By tying me to the guillotine, the success of the revolution can be at least five years earlier. Sacrifice of me can reduce the sacrifices of thousands of people later. It is not that my revolution has failed, but that my revolution has succeeded. I will never leave Shaoxing and am willing to work with both male and female schools. **Life or death. You go back and tell our female comrades that to demand equal rights for men and women, we must first fulfill the obligation of equality between men and women. If I don't go to hell, who will go to hell!" It was with this spirit that Qiu Jin resolutely went to Shaoxing. The execution ground at Guxuan Pavilion. And her righteousness and chivalry indeed inspired those who came after her to carry out revolution without hesitation. 2. At the cost of a hundred thousand heads and blood, we must restore the universe. Qiu Jin's poem "The Japanese in the Yellow Sea Boat Asking for Sentences and Seeing the Map of the Russo-Japanese War" has recently been studied and said to be not only an expression of his feelings of serving the country, but also a cheer for Japan's victory over Tsarist Russia. "Spending the blood of a hundred thousand heads" is about the huge sacrifices made by the Japanese in the Russo-Japanese War in the face of the Tsarist Russian army with superior equipment and superior strength. 3. Don’t say that women are not heroic creatures. The sound of dragon springs is heard on the wall every night. In 1904, Qiu Jin ran away angrily and studied in Japan, where he wrote this poem to express his ambition. After the failure of the uprising, the Shaoxing Prefecture of the Qing Dynasty announced this poem as a "crime". This alone is enough to prove the revolutionary nature of this poem. In feudal society, it was believed that "a woman's lack of talent is a virtue", so the poet here angrily condemned "Stop saying that women are not a good thing", which shows the advanced democratic idea of ??equal rights between men and women. The name of the sword "Longquan" is derived from the "Book of Jin·Zhang Hua Biography". The clanking of the sword is used to describe the injustice in the woman's heart and the heroic spirit of serving the country and killing the enemy. It is really vivid and aggressive! It sets off the heroic image of the poet very well. 4. The autumn wind and autumn rain bring sorrow and sadness. In 1907, Qing troops sent from Hangzhou surrounded Datong Academy. At this time, Qiu Jin had organized a large number of students and weapons to be transferred. The Qing army arrested her and several teachers who were too late to be transferred. The Qing government immediately searched for fugitive revolutionaries in various places and massacred revolutionaries across Zhejiang. The Liberation Army uprising, which Qiu Jin worked hard for half a year, was suppressed before it was officially launched. After Qiu Jin was taken to the Shaoxing magistrate's office, he was severely interrogated in the lobby of the prefect's office that night. Qiu Jin wrote the seven characters "Autumn wind and autumn rain are sad," as the only "written confession" handed over to the Qing government. He also used this to express his regret for the failure of the revolution and his concern for the fate of the motherland. I also refused to write or say anything. In the early morning of July 15, 1907, Qiu Jin was pushed out of the prison in Shaoxing (then called Shanyin County) by Qing soldiers and headed to the execution ground. With the regret of "painting her compatriots in drunken dreams and feeling sad for who can save the motherland from sinking", she poured her blood into creating the ideal of the Republic of China! This warrior who fought bravely for national liberation and women's liberation ended his short and glorious life at the age of only twenty-nine, with resentment for the unfulfilled revolution and unfulfilled ambitions.