Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Tourist attractions - What is the bottom line of "Bug II"

What is the bottom line of "Bug II"

The source of Bug II has always been controversial. It is said that there is a stone tablet in Huxinting, West Lake, Hangzhou, which is the "Worm II" in Qingganlong's calligraphy. Second, it is a cliff stone carving on Mount Tai, located in the west of Panlu and on the north side of Wanxian Building in Mount Tai. It was inscribed by Liu Tinggui, a gifted scholar in the twenty-fifth year of Guangxu in Qing Dynasty.

In the west of Panlu on the north side of Wanxian Building in Taishan Mountain, Shandong Province, there is a famous cliff stone carving: "Insect II". It was written in the 25th year of Guangxu in Qing Dynasty (1899) by Liu Yangui, a gifted scholar. This "Bug II" is a crossword puzzle, with the word "moon" removed, which means "the moon is boundless".

1985 In the summer, contemporary calligraphers and Xie held a painting and calligraphy exhibition in Huiyang, Guangdong, during which they visited the wandering seashore of Daya Bay together. Facing the boundless romantic moon, Zhong Ling, a Shandong native, wrote the words "Worm II" in Taishan stone carving, thanking him for responding with "time": Worm II; Time.

Xie's antithesis puts a frame in the word "time": [time], which means "time is limited" and has a very profound meaning. This pair of couplets was carved on a stone on the beach of Daya Bay and soon spread all over the country. Couplets can be said to be a must through the ages. Both the upper and lower couplets are riddles, but what really constitutes absolute is not a riddle, but a riddle: time is limited and romance is boundless.