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What does Kunpeng Nine Wan Li mean?

Kunpeng can fly high in Wan Li with his wings.

Original sentence: Kun Peng spread his wings, nine Wan Li, and rolled his horns.

From: Modern Mao Zedong's Question and Answer of Niannujiao Bird.

Kun Peng spread his wings, nine Wan Li, roll the corner. Looking down at the sky, it is all a battlefield on earth. Artillery fire, bullet marks everywhere, frightened the sparrows in the tent. Come on, I want to jump.

Kunpeng flies high, flapping his wings with the force of whirlwind, flying high in Wan Li. Dapeng, backed by the sky, is a great city in the world. The gunfire roared all over the sky, and bullets were everywhere, which frightened the sparrows in the grass: how come, alas, I want to fly to that height.

Appreciate Shang Kun's epic situation in Wan Li, where Kun Peng's wings soar up and down, and make the past serve the present with the image of Kun Peng described in "Zhuangzi Xiaoyao Tour", otherwise it can be called a model of familiarizing yourself with the classics and learning from one's mistakes. Then the poet looked down at the vast blue sky with Kun Peng's eyes, and there were big cities and even small towns everywhere.

At this time, the poet seems to have become a far-sighted Kun Peng, with a majestic atmosphere and a great trend of "the four seas are raging and the five continents shake the thunder". Not only is there this momentum, but it is also true that the world revolution is spreading all over the world, and there are "guns and bullets" everywhere.

From this sentence, it is not difficult to understand that Mao Zedong believes that suffering and life go hand in hand. There is no fairy pavilion in the world, only struggle can have a bright future, and only struggle can be a happy philosophy. Even artillery fire can only scare those timid "birds in tents" who are obedient to imperialism, and the one in a million will turn the whole world upside down.