Yu Xun finally questioned the scene of Cao Cao. After Yu Xun finished his position, Cao Cao said, I thought you and I had known each other for 20 years and could entrust them wholeheartedly. Yu Xun said the last sentence with great restraint, then knelt down to salute, banged his head on the floor and left.
Yu Xun said:
This sentence is not a summary of twenty years of friendship. I know your ambition when you become king, and I know you don't want to be a vassal. But you should also know me. I swear to be a courtier of the Han Dynasty.
This sentence is the last farewell between the monarch and the minister, and will eventually go their separate ways. You are the king, then I can only die.
Sima Yi's Theory of Cao Cao as Emperor
There is another line that surprises me. Sima Yi came back from his mission to Soochow and brought back Sun Quan's words to Cao Cao, saying that Cao Cao was destined to return. Cao Cao quietly asked Sima Yi what he thought and whether he wanted to be emperor. Sima yi said, I said to sun quan:
Zhou Wenwang, Zhou Wuwang's father. Zhou Wuwang Ji Fa, the founding monarch of the Western Zhou Dynasty. Sima Yi's meaning is self-evident: Wang will not be the emperor of Cao, but his son must be weighed.
It's really amazing that I see this place. This metaphor is obscure and straightforward, and it points to the great ambition of Wang Wei, who has stopped.
"Some things are still left to future generations."