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How about Cao Cao
(1) Jieshi is in the east

Jieshi is in the east to see the sea. The sea is so broad and mighty, the island stands high on the sea. Trees and paraquat grass, very luxuriant, the autumn wind blowing trees out of the sad sound, the sea is surging huge waves. The operation of the sun and the moon seems to be from the vast ocean. The trip to the sun and the moon, if out of it; Star Han is rotten, if it comes out of it. I am glad to use this poem to express my inner aspirations.

This poem "Watching the Sea" is magnificent. The ambition of swallowing mountains and rivers contained in it is even more admirable. It has always been a poem that I have sung throughout the ages in China. It can be said that the old people from sunset to ignorant children of seven or eight years old are familiar with it.

Chairman Mao once wrote a poem praising: The past is more than a thousand years, and Wei Wu waved his whip, leaving a legacy in Jieshi in the east.

The bleak autumn wind has changed again.

Chairman Mao's poems are not only a compliment to this poem "Watching the Sea", but also a compliment to the author of this poem. You know, Chairman Mao is a great man through the ages, and the people who can get into his eyes are definitely not ordinary people. After all, he is also a heavenly king, and this "heavenly king" praised by Chairman Mao, namely "Wei Wu" in the poem, refers to the famous Emperor Wu of Wei and Cao Cao.

Speaking of Cao Cao, his popularity is very high among the people in China. It can be said that everyone knows him. To borrow an advertising word: everyone knows.

Cao Cao's popularity is so high that he is influenced by a novel, namely The Romance of the Three Kingdoms. However, although this book made Cao Cao's fame soar, it also made him reviled by the world. Because, in this novel, the image of Cao Cao is a villain, sinister and ruthless. Accordingly, later generations also gave him a nickname: "rape."

This is undoubtedly a disparagement of Cao Cao. In history, the real Cao Cao is an indomitable hero, not a sinister villain. This point can also be reflected in Chairman Mao's poems.

But this folk image of Cao Cao is deeply rooted in people's hearts. Therefore, the author only uses this three-inch pen to cross the ancient and modern times and return to the Three Kingdoms to reproduce the glorious life of this long-vilified hero and the troubled times that people deeply remember.