Cooking qionggui
Chiqiong GuiGui is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is Chu ī Qi ó ngru ò Gu ì, which means high prices. It's from Tang Lin Kuan's offering to Confucius in the same year.
origin
"Warring States policy" Volume 16 "Chu CE San · Su Qin's Chu San Ri" ~ 538 ~
Su Qin's Chu, three days to see the king. Talk about the death, words and deeds. The king of Chu said, "if I hear about you, I will hear about the ancients. Mr. Jin is a man who has traveled thousands of miles. He once refused to stay. I would like to hear from him He said: "the food of Chu state is more expensive than jade, and the salary is more expensive than GUI. It's rare for a visitor to see it as a ghost, and it's rare for a king to see it as an emperor of heaven. Now I'm ordering my ministers to eat jade and cook osmanthus, because the ghosts see the emperor. " "Mr. Wang said," I'll give up. I don't know my life. "
interpretation
Source translation
It took Su Qin three months to see the king of Chu. After the conversation, I will say goodbye to the king of Chu. The king of Chu said, "when I hear your name, it's just like when I hear about ancient sages. Now my husband has come all the way to see me. Why don't you stay longer? I hope to hear from you. " Su Qin replied: "the grain of Chu is more expensive than Baoyu, and the firewood of Chu is more expensive than cinnamon. It's hard for the reporter to meet like a kid, and it's hard for the king to meet like the emperor of heaven. Now I want to use jade as grain and cinnamon as firewood to burn, and I want to see the emperor of heaven through the kid." The king of Chu interrupted Su Qin and said, "please come and stay in the guest house. I'll obey you."
interpretation
"Chu's food is more expensive than jade, and his salary is more expensive than GUI. It's rare for a visitor to see a ghost, and it's rare for a king to see a God. Now I'm ordering my ministers to eat jade and cook osmanthus, because the ghosts see the emperor. " Boil jade and burn osmanthus. It means high prices.
Homologous allusions
Guiyu Guiyu one pot Guiyu grain salary wet salary GUI pot Guiyu pot qiongcuan jade pot cangyu burning new GUI pot guicuan Dan Gui Yu Gui Zhu GUI Mi Ru Zhu Mi Ru Zhu Yu Yue Yue Yue Yue Yue Yue Yue Yue Yue Yue Yue GUI grain qiongsu Gui Gui
Examples
Tang linkuan's poem "offering to Kong Lang Zhong in the same year" reads: "cook Qiong, live in Guanju of emperor GUI, sell all the cold clothes and books."
Yu Xin's Xie Zhao Wang Lai Mi Qi in the Northern Zhou Dynasty: "it's not the Danzao but the bead, it's the Jingtai but the jade."
The third part of song Sushi's "meeting with CAI Zhun's doctor to invite you to visit the West Lake" is: "the bow of the boat is fresh and thin, and the stern of the boat is fragrant with jade."
Huang Tingjian of Song Dynasty wrote in the second rhyme of Zhang Zhongmou's passing through the temple of juechi: "the dream is as startling as yesterday, and the cooking jade is trapped in the capital."
Song Fan Chengda "Jiangyuan county Zhang Jichang Zhengzi Shansong hall" poem: "think back Minyu, dare to look at chuchuyu."
Chinese PinYin : chuī qióng ruò guì
Cooking qionggui
difficult to guess or comprehend. xuán miào mò cè
heaped up earth becomes a mountain. tǔ rǎng xì liú