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What does Zilan Shu Hui mean?
Zilan Shu Hui: refers to the cultivation of talents with good quality, and is often used to describe the noble behavior of schools or teachers in educating people.

Son: Plowing.

Orchid: refers to bluegrass, often used as a gentleman, that is, a person with noble qualities.

Trees: planting and cultivating.

Hui: Vanilla, a herb of orchids, was often used by the ancients to describe people with good quality or good quality.

This idiom comes from Qu Yuan's poem Lisao: "I am both the nine flowers of the orchid and the hundred acres of the tree." I planted nine hectares of Chunlan, and I planted 100 acres of garden autumn flowers. Express your efforts and cultivate a lot of talents.

Extended data:

In Li Sao, Qu Yuan successfully created the first lyrical protagonist with full image and distinct personality in the history of China literature, which embodied Qu Yuan's great thoughts and lofty personality.

The theme of the whole poem, that is, through the description of the poet's lifelong struggle for lofty ideals, strongly expresses his anguish and contradictory feelings of being killed, his spirit of dedication to the country, and his deep patriotism and sympathy for the people who share weal and woe with the country.

It shows his indomitable fighting spirit of bravely pursuing truth and light and upholding justice and ideals. At the same time, it profoundly exposed the decadent and dark nature of the noble group of Chu headed by Chu Jun, and criticized their crimes of reversing right and wrong, running a private party, harming talents and doing evil for the country.

References:

Qu Yuan-Baidu Encyclopedia