Five touching historical stories in modern times. Please. ~ ~ ~ Thanks for your help.
Once upon a time, there was another man named Su He. He loved a horse very much and was very loyal. He grew up together ~ however, there was a prince who valued his horse very much and pretended to hold a horse race. Later, Su He's horse really lived up to expectations and won the championship, but Wang Ye used it as an excuse to take his horse. However, in the end, he had to give up what he loved. In this way, Su He missed his lover day and night. The horse yearned for its master more and more strongly, until one day, the prince rode a horse to show off to the ministers. Suddenly, the horse fell to the ground like a madman and went to the grassland far away. The prince ordered his servant to shoot the horse with a poisonous arrow, but after the horse was shot by an arrow, he still ran non-stop in the direction of his master Su He's house, and finally dragged his tired body to the front of Su He's yurt and fell to the ground, dragon. Watching his beloved horse panting on the ground and finally dying ~ ~ To commemorate him, Su He made a musical instrument out of horse bones and made strings out of horse mane. The sound of pulling out is exactly the same as that of the horse before he died. Later, he was named Ma Touqin ~ ~ The guerrillas skillfully caught the devil and repaired two bunkers in Cocoon Village. Although there were ghost soldiers standing guard day and night, they could not stop the guerrillas from standing freely on the west side of Hedong under the cover of villagers. The Japanese invaders thought that it would be foolproof to be armed and engage in an "environmental protection system", so they casually walked through some villages on the east side of Yongding River. I don't know that in the countryside where anti-Japanese sentiment is high, ordinary people and guerrillas have become a family, working in the fields at the same time and frequently appearing in the streets. One afternoon (in a big circle), a sergeant named Zhu Ben and a spy named Bai came down from the bunker by the river and came to the office. When the villagers saw it, they immediately informed the guerrilla captains Hong Kong Governor and Li Ying who were working in Cocoon Village. The two men quickly put their baskets on their backs, took hoes and hoes, disguised themselves as farmers and followed the enemy. When the devil and the spy walked to the "Wudao Temple" in the south of the cocoon, the captain of the governor lifted the devil Kikuben's waist from behind with a small shovel and asked him to raise his hand and disarm. Comrade Li got over the pistol of Special Agent Bai. After catching the devils and spies, put them in the progressive households in the village. The next day, under the cover of the workers crossing the river, the enemy was escorted to the guerrilla base in Hexi. Two days later, when I discovered that Kikumoto and Bai were missing, they sent troops to various villages to look for them. They gathered people together and asked them. Everyone said, "I don't know, and I haven't seen Japanese officials with China people." The helpless Japanese finally had to give up. 1943 One afternoon at the turn of spring and summer, Pan Xx, a Japanese translator, came to the village by bike, found Xx in the office, took him to a family that smoked opium, and rode back to the office. Villagers arranged by the guerrillas found Pan XX's whereabouts and immediately reported to Comrade Lian Xinghai of the guerrillas. In the afternoon, when the sun was setting, the Japanese translator rode out of the East Street and crossed the big screen wall. The guerrillas hiding behind the screen wall hit him with a river stone. Before Pan XX could react, he was caught by guerrillas, grabbed his pistol, brought back to the "safe house" and put on farmers' clothes, and escorted to Hexi. The next day, the Japanese devils came to the village, concentrated people in a place called Xikouer in West Street, and temporarily hired Yang's son-in-law in North Street as an interpreter to explain the disappearance of the translator and let everyone report the case. Everyone said that they didn't know the interpreter or that he was coming. The fugitive Chang Bao said that he had gone back when the sun went down in the afternoon. The enemy couldn't help giving up. In the 1940s, Mr Wen Yiduo, a professor at Kunming United University, had a poor salary, a sick wife and many children, which made life difficult to maintain. He once took part in amateur courses in middle school to earn money to support his family. But after only one year of teaching, he was expelled from the school on the charge of "spreading democracy and freedom to students", a friend's idea: engraving. As a result, in the market of Kunming, there appeared the "running sample" printed by Wen Yiduo. And the small business done by acquaintances can hardly make money. In desperation, Wen Yiduo prepared a table and planned to set up a stall. Wen Yiduo's printing stall was only set up for one day, and then he was persuaded to come back. But how can a family live without a stall? Finally, President Mei Yiqi contacted Zhu Ziqing, Shen Congwen and other professors 1 1, and jointly published an advertisement for Wen Yiduo in the newspaper, asking him to "set up an office" at home to engrave for others. The advertisement stipulates the provisions of the "Golden Stone Running Example": "Lithography 1200 yuan, the tooth print is 3,000 yuan per word, and the border payment is counted as one word. If it is too big, it will be doubled." Kunming people have a hobby of collecting ivory seals, and with the help of university professors, their business is endless. For more than two years, Wen Yiduo left more than 1400 prints on the printed spectrum. Over time, Wen Yiduo had a big pimple on his finger and his eyes were blurred. Wen Yiduo laughed at himself: "I am a handicraft worker. No matter how hard it is, it is necessary to engrave, smell and print, mainly during the period of National Southwest Associated University. At that time, the Japanese aggressors committed various crimes in China, and the people of China lived in an unprecedented disaster. Although Wen Yiduo is a professor, his salary can't support his family, so he has to list and print to subsidize his family. He said in the letter: "My brother's financial situation is even more difficult to ask. Two years ago, I lived under the threat of cutting off cooking. I started taking part-time classes in middle school, but it was not enough. After a friend's suggestion, it was listed and engraved to make up for it. Two-thirds of the income recently depends on this. From1April 1944 to1July 1946, Wen Yiduo left over 1400 prints, which shows his diligence in managing prints and his family's economic situation. His seal is of great artistic value. Pujiang Qing specially wrote an example of Professor Wen Yiduo's "Jin Shi Run", calling him "Huang Changjiu Piao, I see him now; Cheng's iron pen is beautiful, and the world respects his learning. According to Ji Zhenhuai's Chronicle of Wen Yiduo, Professor Pu Jiangqing specially explained these two sentences, saying: "Huang is a famous sculptor in Ming Dynasty, a man with a long beard, symbolizing Mr. Wen's demeanor; Cheng is a famous Confucian scholar and master of seal cutting in Qing Dynasty, and it is most appropriate to imitate Mr. Wen. Professor Wen Yiduo's Jin Shi Run Example was signed by more than ten professors, including Mei Yiqi, Feng Youlan, Zhu Ziqing and Pan Guangdan, and became famous for a while. Wen Yiduo runs the printing industry to subsidize his family, but his running the printing industry has never affected his teaching. In Tsinghua, he studied knowledge very seriously. Zhao Lisheng's "Jin Lietang's Self-Report" said that "as soon as he returned to Tsinghua, he worked hard and wrote many detailed reading notes in the new south campus". When the National Southwest Associated University moved south, the College of Liberal Arts took classes in the former site of Bible College in Hengshan Mountain, Nanyue, and the dormitory was tense. Wen Yiduo once shared a room with Qian Mu, Wu Mi and Shen Youding, only to see that he was calm and meticulous, devoted himself to academic research and studied hard to prepare lessons. Qian Mu's "Parents' Eighty Memories, Miscellaneous Notes on Teachers and Friends" recalled this incident and said: "In the dead of night, there was a long table in the room, and more than one light spontaneously stood in front of it. At that time, many people often read The Book of Songs and Songs of the South, and wrote articles when they came across new ideas. A person sits quietly under the lamp and writes. Life is hard, but research is unremitting. 1944, I finally finished the academic monograph "Revision of Songs of the South", which was recognized as a masterpiece in literary research by academic circles after publication. This professionalism is fascinating.