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Appreciation of Pangu's creation of Chinese studies.
Pangu created the world.

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Pangu is an epoch-making god in ancient legends of China. He evolved a vibrant world with his own life.

The legend of Pangu's creation was first seen in the Thirty-Five Calendars compiled by Wu of the Three Kingdoms. This book has been lost now, and only some of its contents are kept in books such as "Taiping Magnolia" and "Literary Lei Ju".

Story skills

In ancient times, there was no sky, no land, and chaos and darkness everywhere. But after 18 thousand years in this darkness, a god with infinite power was born. His name was Pangu.

Pangu woke up and opened his eyes, but he could see nothing. So he picked up a magic axe, roared and smashed it everywhere. Light and clear things float upwards, forming the sky; Heavy and muddy things sink down to form the ground. Pangu supported the sky with his hands and the ground with his feet to prevent the two from overlapping. Every day, the land is getting taller and thicker, and Pangu is getting taller and taller. After another 18,000 years, the sky became extremely high and the earth became extremely thick. Exhausted Pangu lay down to rest and never got up again.

Pangu's head turned into a mountain, his limbs into pillars of the sky, his eyes into the sun and the moon, his blood into a river, his hair and skin into flowers and plants, his breath into the wind, his cries into thunder, his tears into showers and rain to nourish the earth.

Pangu created heaven and earth with his natural divine power and strong will, which made the world colorful and left a happy home for later human beings.

knowledge base

Unnecessary worry

In ancient Qi, people were worried that the sky would collapse, they could not sleep well and could not eat. Someone advised him: "The sky is made of gas and will not fall." The man asked again, "won't the sun, moon and stars fall?" The man replied, "The sun, the moon and the stars are all luminous gases, and falling down can't hurt people." The man asked, "What if the ground sinks?" The man said, "The ground is full of accumulated clods that won't sink." The alarmist breathed a sigh of relief. Later, this allusion evolved into a common idiom-worrying about the sky, which is used to describe unnecessary worry.