References:
China Ancient Prose Appreciation Dictionary
This paper discusses the present from the past, distinguishes right from wrong, is concise, and uses rhetorical methods such as metaphor, parallelism, antithesis and quotation to advance layer by layer, with thorough reasoning, strong practical pertinence and strong persuasiveness. It is an argumentative paper with strong combat effectiveness.
The Warring States Policy consists of 33 articles and 486 chapters. There are 1 articles in the Western Zhou Dynasty, divided into 17 articles; Eastern Zhou Policy 1 article, divided into 22 chapters; 5 articles of Qin Ce, divided into 64 chapters; Qi Ce has 6 articles, divided into 57 chapters; Chu Ce has 4 articles, divided into 52 chapters; Zhao Ce has 4 articles, divided into 66 chapters; Wei Ce has 4 articles, divided into 8 1 chapter; 3 articles by Han Ce, divided into 69 chapters; Yan Ce has 3 articles, divided into 34 chapters; Song Weice has 1 article, divided into 14 chapters; There are 1 articles on Zhongshan policy, which are divided into 10 chapters. This was written by Wu Shidao, a native of Dongyang, in the second year of Taiding in Yuan Dynasty (1325), according to the revised edition of Ceng Gong. Wu Shidao's Notes on the Warring States Policy has spread to this day. Another Song Dynasty poet, Bao Biao, changed the order of the original book and made a new annotation. His best friend Jin has a supplementary explanation on the Notes on the Warring States Policy. Gaoyou made a note for the old version of Warring States Policy in the Eastern Han Dynasty, which is incomplete today. 1973, a silk book of the Western Han Dynasty was unearthed in Mawangdui, Changsha, Hunan Province, which recorded the current events of the Warring States Period and was named Letters of the Warring States Period. It is similar to the Warring States Policy and can make up for the mistakes and shortcomings of the current edition of the Warring States Policy.
I really don't understand.