In Ghost Blowing the Lamp, Hu Bayi's gold-touching theory all comes from half a sixteen-character Yin-Yang Feng Shui secret book.
It is said that this book was written by Zhang Sanlianzi, a master of gold-touching in the Qing Dynasty.
Is there really a sixteen-character Yin-Yang Feng Shui secret book written by Mojin Xiaowei?
It’s a pity, because as mentioned before, Mojin Xiaowei in the novel is a fictional setting, so the Sixteen-Character Yin-Yang Fengshui The secret technique is naturally made up by the author out of thin air.
Yes, even similar books do not exist.
There has never been such a book in the world, and there is absolutely no legend of this sixteen-character Feng Shui.
However, there is a legend of a sixteen-character fortune teller, but it is far from Feng Shui. , briefly talk about it here.
According to legend, there was a wealthy family named Wang.
There was a young lady in the family who traveled to a deserted garden one year and picked up an ear of grain.
This ear of grain was so strange that it grew out of the bones of a dead person under the ground.
There was only one ear of corn on it.
A grain of unusually plump grain is produced, which smells fragrant.
Miss Wang didn't know what she was thinking at the time, but she actually ate the grain.
After she returned home, she suddenly felt pregnant and gave birth to a son in ten months.
Because the child had no father, he had to take his mother's surname of Wang Chan.
When he grew up, he went to the mountains to learn Taoism.
He named himself Guiguzi.
He could know the past and the future.
Later generations called him Wang Chan Patriarch.
This man could not only predict the cause and effect of all things, but also Being able to calculate the changes of the sun, moon and stars can be said to have known five hundred years in advance and five hundred years in hindsight.
Usually fortune tellers tell people's fortunes by correcting eight characters, but Guiguzi's predictions are sixteen characters, so he got another nickname "Sixteen Character Fortune Teller", but Guiguzi's fortune teller has not been handed down, and this story is only passed down among the people.
A legend.
The real Guiguzi did exist.
He was active in the Warring States Period, and his surname was Wang, but his name was unknown.
Because he lived in Guigu, he was called Mr.
Guigu.
Famous figures of the Warring States Period, Zhang Yi and Su Qin, both studied under Guiguzi and learned the art of Zongheng, and were proficient in physiognomy and the art of war.
Sun Bin, the most outstanding military strategist in Chinese history, was also a disciple of Mr.
Guigu.
Mr.
Guigu traveled around the world and was alive for hundreds of years.
Years later, I don’t know where it ended up.
There is another legend that is closer to a myth: Mr.
Gui Gu is famous for his fame and fortune, or he is called Xuan Weizi.
He is also a teacher of the Qin and Han Dynasties.
He has a close relationship with Zhenjun Erlang, ranks among the immortals, and is regarded as the ancestor of Wang Chan. .
Among the paintings about him that have been circulated in later generations, the most famous one is the blue and white porcelain jar known as the "Gui Valley Down the Mountain", which is known as China's most valuable porcelain in the world.
This priceless Yuan Dynasty porcelain jar is now lost in the United States.
Mr.
Guigu in the "Picture of Guigu Descending the Mountain" has a kind appearance.
Just like what was said in the Yuan Dynasty, he rode a two-tiger chariot down the mountain.
In fact, the chariot was pulled by a tiger and a leopard.
This shows that he is completely different from other Taoist and Buddhist laymen.
The spirit of immortality is awe-inspiring
.
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