Yu Tu (wū tú): Another name for the tiger comes from Zuo Zhuan, four years in Gong Xuan: "The Chu people ... are called Tiger Yu Tu." "How can Reiko Kobayakawa not be a husband?" "The Warring States Policy, Zhao Ce Touching the Dragon and Showing the Empress Zhao": "Does the husband also love his youngest son?" Lu Xun used a positive tone here.
The title of this poem is Answering a Guest, which comes from Addendum to Lu Xun's Letters. At the end of the poem, the title is "Early winter drama, please record Mr. Kazuo Hirai's correction, Lu Xun." Kazuo Hirai is a doctor at the Japanese "Bamboo Strip" Battery Hospital in Shanghai. He once treated Lu Xun's son's dysentery facing the sea. This poem was written by Lu Xun when he took his son to treat a disease, expressing his feelings for his son.
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Creative background: In the early 1930s, a group of people fabricated rumors and maliciously cursed Lu Xun's son Zhou Haiying, who was under one year old, and quoted the old saying that "father and son are ungrateful" to satirize Lu Xun's fatherly love for his young son. So I refuted this poem.
Appreciation: Answering a Guest is a poem that reflects Lu Xun's love for his son, and it can even be said that he loves his son. Lu Xun loves his children very much, and some people joke with him about it. He wrote this poem as an answer. One or two sentences in this poem are an answer to the slander of some shameless literati, that is, "Hakkas", and also a refutation of Confucian "father and son". Solid, powerful and irrefutable, it is a famous sentence widely circulated.
Three or four sentences compare people with things. Through vivid metaphors and delicate descriptions, they expressed the deep affection and ardent hope of revolutionary fathers for future generations, and also illustrated the visualization of "Reiko Kobayakawa". The last two sentences are humorous, subtle and powerful. They use well-known examples to mercilessly mock the enemy and strike back forcefully. At the same time, they show Lu Xun's spirit of caring for and caring for revolutionary descendants.