What is the bottom line? You know it's called

Su Dongpo's couplets

The first part: Hungry chickens steal rice and Tong Tong is beaten.

I heard such a story when I was very young. It is said that when Su Dongpo went out for an outing and saw a child on the other side of the river who wouldn't let other hungry chickens eat their own food, he picked up a small bamboo tree and hit the chicken ~ ~ ~ Su Dongpo felt it and wrote the first couplet casually: "Hungry chickens steal rice, Tong Tong hits"; Hungry (hungry) chickens (native chickens) steal (steal) rice (rice) seeds (seeds) tung (pick up small bamboo tung) and beat (beat away chickens that eat rice).

Su Dongpo thought hard for a long time, but he couldn't find the next couplet with homophones? So I posted a national list to attract the bottom line with heavy money. After half a year, no one came. A year passed quickly, and it was another summer. Su Dongpo casually went to a friend's house for a walk, lying on a bamboo chair of a friend's house to enjoy the cool, and found a mouse enjoying the cool on the beam. Su Dongpo used his hand to sketch that the mouse had left, but the mouse didn't move in the end? Do you know if you are asleep or blind? So Su Dongpo coughed! The mouse ran away in a hurry and unfortunately fell to the ground from the beam. Su Dongpo remembered the child who drove the chicken? Couplets are:

The second part: the summer mouse cools the beam and the guest coughs.

In summer (summer), mice (mice) are cool (enjoying the cool). Cough (cough) on the beam (guest) panic (run away in panic).