The autumn wind blew through nine dangerous places. There was silence after the war, and thousands of troops celebrated and stayed up all night. These two poems are from "Memories of Eight Feelings of Time Past" by the Ming Dynasty poet Wang Bochou (the manuscript of "Birthday Week" is not included in this episode). Commentary on the Nine Games: Nine Dangerous Places. War is often replaced by wolf smoke.
Wang Bochou's ancient poem "Eight Feelings of Remembering the Past" (the manuscript of the birth of Zhou Dynasty is not collected in this collection). Autumn wind is nine years old, and iron riders get drunk at night. With great efforts to pay God, the king will drive in the year of prayer.
What does show smoke actually mean?
Wolf smoke is a signal of fireworks lit at the beacon tower when the ancient border guards in China discovered the enemy's situation, and firewood was used as fuel. Wolf smoke is a signal of fireworks lit at the beacon tower when the ancient border guards found the enemy. Wolf smoke actually refers to the fireworks lit at the beacon tower when the ancient border guards in China discovered the enemy's situation. The fuel of this fireworks is firewood, not wolf dung.
What's more, shows that China people have been scared for two thousand years, and there are idioms and allusions of "beating the prince with a bonfire" and "shows that smoke is everywhere". The ancient people called the wolf a bonfire, because the wolf was a totem advocated by the ancient Huns, Turks, Tubo and other ethnic minorities. At that time, its army was called "Wolf Soldiers" by China people, and its monarch was called "Wolf Lord".
Moreover, the ancients naturally called the beacon signal ignited by these ethnic groups when they invaded the Central Plains "wolf smoke".