I believe everyone is familiar with the movie Hachi: The Story of a Dog. But in fact, this film is adapted from a true story that happened in Japan in 1925. A Gong 1923 was born in Daguan City. He is a purebred white Akita dog. Two months after its birth, it was brought home by Yukio Ueno, a lonely agricultural professor at the University of Tokyo. The professor gets off work late every day, and Hachi meets his master there every night. 1925 On April 2 1 day, the professor died of a heart attack at school. Hachi went to the station as usual, without waiting for the professor. The same road, once, a day, a year? It was not until a snowy evening seven years later that Ah Ba, who was limping and weak, slowly collapsed in the snow beside the station and never stood up again. At the north entrance of Shibuya Station in Tokyo, there is a bronze statue of a dog, that is, the famous loyal dog Hachi.
I have heard such a story. A two-and-a-half-year-old Beijing Ba dog? Hi. Hi? Because his old master died, he stayed in the mourning hall for two days without eating or drinking, and his eyes were full of tears. Finally, you stayed up for Master 16 days? Hi. Hi? , closed his eyes in front of the old master's hall. Old people's families keep their promises and wills? Hi. Hi? Buried together by the old master's mourning hall, always accompanying the master, one person and one dog reunited in another world.
We often hear stories about loyal dogs, and loyalty to dogs is often touching. But don't forget, loyalty is not an obligation, it is just a quality embodied in these loyal dogs. For us humans, dogs may be just a part of our lives, but for dogs, we are all to them. What they try their best to protect is that hope, that great warmth for it, that pure love for its dog life.