Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - I kill chickens, ducks and geese in Enping City. Now I want to make a hotel. They can do it every day. The price of killing geese is 3 yuan per piece, and the price of killing chickens is 2 yuan per p

I kill chickens, ducks and geese in Enping City. Now I want to make a hotel. They can do it every day. The price of killing geese is 3 yuan per piece, and the price of killing chickens is 2 yuan per p

I kill chickens, ducks and geese in Enping City. Now I want to make a hotel. They can do it every day. The price of killing geese is 3 yuan per piece, and the price of killing chickens is 2 yuan per piece.

The chicken saves the man

A sergeant from a local town in Quzhou went to the countryside to supervise money and grain. There was a farmer who was too poor to prepare meals for his servants. I plan to kill the hens that are hatching eggs for cooking. The officer was in a daze and saw a man in yellow clothes under the mulberry tree. He begged him for his life and said, "It's not a pity that I'm dead; it's a pity that my children haven't been born yet." The officer was surprised but not surprised. I couldn't bear to take a closer look, and I saw a hen hatching eggs in the house. The people from that family wanted to come over to catch chickens, but the guards stopped them.

After a while, the guard came to the house again. The hen led a group of chicks and jumped up to the guard to express his happiness and gratitude. The guard left his house and walked to the house. A few hundred steps away, a tiger came. At this time, a chicken suddenly flew over and pounced on the tiger's eyes. The tiger could not open its eyes, so that the officer could avoid being injured by the tiger. From then on, no one in this village ate chicken.

Stop killing and avoid violent death

A man named Kong in Jiashan went to a relative's house, and the relative invited him to eat. When a chicken was about to be killed for him to eat, the man named Kong tried his best to dissuade him. His relatives refused to listen, so he hurriedly said, "I have sworn not to kill and release animals, and I will never eat chickens." Then he stopped.

That night, he stayed at a relative's house. The family was pounding rice during the day and hanging a big stone pestle on the rotten roof beam at night. He is sleeping down there. As the night progressed, he suddenly saw in his dream a chicken coming to peck his head, and then came back again. I've been driving like this several times and it hasn't stopped yet. He couldn't stand the chicken's interference. So he lit a fire to drive away the chickens. As soon as he left the bed, the big stone pestle fell down and landed on the pillow where his head was. He then understood that chickens come to repay kindness, and often used this incident to advise people not to kill.