The second time, Shi Dalang went to Kansai, Boxing Town under the jurisdiction of Luti in Huayin County.
For the third time, Mr Zhao rebuilt the Wen Shu Institute. Did Lu make a scene in Wutai Mountain?
The fourth time, the bully was drunk and sold gold accounts, and the monk made a scene in Taohua Village?
The fifth time, was the red pine forest crock temple in Longtou Road, Jiuwen burned by Lu?
The sixth time, the flower monk pulled out the head of the weeping willow leopard and strayed into the White Tiger Hall?
The seventh time coach Lin stabbed Cangzhou to make a scene in the wild pig forest?
The eighth time, firewood entered the door, attracting all the guests in the world and flooding with sticks.
The Water Margin is one of China's four classical novels. It is a chapter-by-chapter novel with the Sung River Uprising as the main story background at the end of the Northern Song Dynasty, and it belongs to a heroic legend in genre. The author or editor is generally regarded as Shi Naian, and most of the existing periodicals have one or two people, Shi Naian and Luo Guanzhong. The book describes the grand story of Liangshan hero's resistance to oppression, his growth in Liangshan, Shui Bo, his enlistment in the Song Dynasty and his eventual demise.
It artistically reflects the whole process of the Sung River Uprising from its occurrence, development to failure in China history, profoundly reveals the social roots of the uprising, enthusiastically praises the uprising heroes' resistance struggle and social ideals, and specifically reveals the internal historical reasons for the failure of the uprising.
There are two versions of Water Margin: the traditional version and the simplified version. The description of the traditional version is more delicate, and after the collection of righteousness, it is the plot of collecting Liao and Fang wax. Simple and complicated, with rough writing, but more than the traditional two plots: Ping tian hu and Wang Qing. Bamboo slips were deeply loved by middle and lower readers in the Ming and Qing Dynasties, but they declined rapidly after entering the 20th century and became the research materials of the evolution history of editions.