After Zhou Jin was saved by everyone, he cried at the number plate until his mouth bled. They took him to a tea shed and collected money to enter Zhou Jin. In the first scene, "seven words are common", and sure enough. Wenxian people "did not come to recognize their relatives" and won the Jinshi in the Beijing exam. Three years later, he was promoted to the imperial history and was ordered to learn Taoism in Guangdong. After Zhou Jin took office, he was determined not to give up his true talents.
Extended data
This article embodies the abnormal psychology of literati who are eager to pursue their official career and conform to the trend of the times.
Zhou Jin and Jin Fan, two figures, are two poor old people who were created by the author in the second and third rounds respectively. This is a typical example of two corrupt scholars. Both of them were poor before the middle school entrance examination, and they were subjected to the supercilious look and ridicule of others.
The author criticizes the whole class of scholars and civil society through the changes of the attitude of scholars towards Zhou Jin before and after he became rich. While writing the protagonist, it also depicts a broader social ecology.
The way for scholars to get along with each other is not mutual appreciation in people's imagination, or the same fate. On the contrary, there is a naked food chain relationship between them. Once the examination room is frustrated, it is not sympathy, but contempt and spit on by the whole class. Once you leap over the dragon gate and enter the upper class, you will find the whole class smiling.