Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - What's the next sentence of piano, chess, painting, poetry, wine and tea?

What's the next sentence of piano, chess, painting, poetry, wine and tea?

The next sentence of "Qinqi, Calligraphy, Painting, Poetry, Wine and Tea" is "Everything in those days could not be separated from it?"

This sentence comes from "Poems of Lian Po" written by a juren named "Lian Po" during the Kangxi period of Qing Dynasty. One of the quatrains recorded Zhang Can, a native of Xiangtan, Hunan. The specific original text is as follows:

Painting, calligraphy, chess and poetry,

Everything is inseparable from it. ?

Now seven things have changed,

Rice, oil, salt, sauce and vinegar tea. ?

"Painting, calligraphy, piano, chess, poetry and hops" is an elegant thing. In those days, it was fun and chic. Now, everything is declared as "subversion" and has become a common thing of "rice, oil, salt, sauce and vinegar tea". However, the contrast and transformation between elegance and vulgarity in poetry shows the realistic living state of all sentient beings in real life. Taking "rice, oil, salt, sauce and vinegar tea" as the counterpart of "calligraphy, painting, piano and chess poetry" shows the author's ingenuity and innovation. Due to the repeated use of passive proverbs and poetic language, poetry has gained new glory, just like the end of a rope, suddenly flowers are brilliant.