Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel franchise - The Original Meaning of Lu Ji Huai Ju

The Original Meaning of Lu Ji Huai Ju

Lu Ji was six years old and returned from patrol. Motherly love, three oranges.

Ji, the word, is from Wujun. His father Kang was the satrap of Lujiang and made friends with Yuan Shu. When Ji was six years old, he saw the technique in Jiujiang, and the technique was orange. With three achievements and a farewell speech, the orange fell to the ground. Xiao Shu said that Lu Lang was a guest and pregnant with oranges. Ji knelt down and replied, orange and sweet, I want to go back to my mother. The technology is amazing.

Love is true, and the position is close to the line. Take my six-year-old son as an example. Oranges don't forget their mothers. They are really beautiful. Today, people are pregnant with fruit and want to entertain their children. Husband is as pregnant as he is, but it is easy to love his son with love. Cherish things, cherish children, know who is cheap, cherish things, and respect your relatives. Strange, Lu Lang, this is the law.

[Edit this paragraph] Word translation

Jiujiang: an ancient place name, now Jiujiang City, Shanxi Province.

Remarks: Goodbye.

Strange: I think my achievements are different.

[Edit this paragraph] Translation

At the end of the Han Dynasty, Lu Ji was only six years old and was going to visit Yuan Shu in Jiujiang. Yuan Shu took out many oranges and gave them to Lu Ji. Lu Ji secretly put three oranges in his sleeve and went to Yuan Shu to thank humbly when he left. Unexpectedly, these three oranges fell from their sleeves to the ground.

Yuan Shu said with a smile, Liu Lang, you came to be a small guest, but you secretly hid the owner's oranges, lest others laugh at you for stealing oranges. Lu Ji knelt on the ground and answered, my mother's temper loves to eat these things. For this reason, I thought of taking some back to my mother. Yuan Shu was greatly surprised.

[Edit this paragraph] Knowledge

Lu Ji, a Chinese character, was an astronomer of the State of Wu (now Suzhou, Jiangsu) during the Three Kingdoms period. His father's name is Lu Kang, and he was once the magistrate of Lujiang County. After Lu Ji became an adult, he was knowledgeable and familiar with astronomical calendar calculation. He once wrote the map of the muddy sky, annotated the Book of Changes and wrote the Annotation of the Xuanjing.

[Edit this paragraph] Comments

There is only one thing about Lu Ji's filial piety in Historical Records, but it is enough to reflect his character. When the so-called "orange" was in my arms, it was naive and pure filial piety was forgotten. Heroes have been like this since ancient times. "