188 1 year, I was born in a family named Zhou in Fucheng, Shaoxing, Zhejiang. Father is a student; My mother's surname is Lu, a countryman. She learned to read by self-study. It is said that when I was young, I still had forty or fifty acres of paddy fields at home, so I was not very worried about my livelihood. But when I was thirteen years old, great changes suddenly took place in my family, and there was almost nothing left. I live in a relative's house, sometimes called a beggar. So I decided to go home, and my father became seriously ill and died for about three years. I gradually can't think about even a small tuition fee; My mother gave me some travelling expenses to teach me to go to a school without tuition, because I always refused to learn to be a screen friend or a businessman. -these are the two roads that children of declining literati in my hometown often take. I was eighteen, so I traveled to Nanjing, was admitted to the Naval Academy, and was assigned to the Ministry. About half a year later, I went out to improve the mine road school to learn mining. After graduation, I was sent to study in Japan. But when I graduated from the preparatory school in Tokyo, I decided to study medicine. One of the reasons is that I do know that new medicine is of great help to Japan's reform. So I went to Sendai Medical College for two years. At this time of the Sino-Japanese War, I happened to see a Japanese being beheaded for being a detective in the movie, so I thought it was useless for China to cure several people. There should be a wider movement ... First of all, we should advocate new literature and art. I gave up my student status and went to Tokyo with some friends to make some small plans, but they all failed one after another. I tried to go to Germany again, but failed. Finally, because my mother and several others really wanted me to have financial help, I returned to China. I am twenty-nine years old at this time. Upon my return to China, I worked as a chemistry and physiology teacher in a secondary normal school in Hangzhou, Zhejiang. The following year, I went out to be the provost of Shaoxing Middle School. In the third year, I went out and had nowhere to go. I wanted to go to the bookstore to compile, but I was rejected. But the revolution also happened. After the recovery of Shaoxing, I became the principal of a normal school. The revolutionary government was established in Nanjing, and the Minister of Education recruited me as a member of the Ministry and moved to Beijing. Later, he served as a lecturer in Chinese Department of Peking University, Normal University and Women's Normal University. In 1926, several scholars went to the Duan government [2] to report that I was not good. To arrest me, I fled to Xiamen with the help of my friend Lin Yutang [3] and became a professor at Xiamen University. /kloc-resigned in 0/2 and became a professor at Sun Yat-sen University in Guangdong. Resigned in April, left Guangdong in September and has been living in Shanghai. When I was studying abroad, I only published a few bad articles in magazines. My first novel was written in 19 18, and was published in New Youth at the suggestion of my friend Qian. At this time, pen name); "Mr. Lu Xun" was used; I also often make short comments under other names. Now there are two collections of short stories printed into books: Scream and Hesitation. A paper, a memoir, a prose poem and four short comments. Besides translation, there are A Brief History of China's Novels and Legends of Tang and Song Dynasties.