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A Brief Introduction of Liu E's Travel Notes of Lao Can
Travel Notes of Lao Can, one of the four condemnation novels in the late Qing Dynasty, was signed by Hongdu Bailiansheng and written by Liu E in the Qing Dynasty. There are 20 original editions, 9 sequels, and foreign manuscripts 1 volume, which describe what quacks and old people saw, heard and did during their travels. Vivid writing, well received.

This novel is also the only novel in Liu E. The moral of the so-called "old disability" is what Liu E said. "If the chess game is disabled, we will be old. Do we have to do it without crying?" Some versions say that "when the chess game is old, we will be disabled", and Lu Shixian called it "or the mistake of copying".

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The two upright officials, Yu Xian (Yu Xian) and Gang Bi (fortitude) in Lao Can's Travels are actually representatives of cruelty and stubbornness. Lu Xun wrote when commenting on Travel Notes of Lao Can: "The so-called honest officials are hateful, even more hateful than corrupt officials. The speaker has never spoken, although the author is also very complacent. "

Travels of Lao Can is not completely true. For example, when writing Zhuang alludes to Zhang Yao, the governor of Shandong Province, there is an unfair description. Lao Can's Travels also has some antipathy to the revolution, such as calling the revolutionary party led by Sun Yat-sen "a dog" and "a dragon".

Baidu Encyclopedia-Travel Notes of Lao Can