Liang Zhu specific content:
Zhu Yingtai disguised herself as a man and went to college to study, where she met Liang Shanbo. Because like-minded and deskmate, they became good friends. On one occasion, Liang Shanbo went to Zhu Yingtai's house to find her, found that Zhu Yingtai was a girl, fell in love with Zhu Yingtai, and proposed to get married. However, Zhu Yingtai's father felt that Liang Shanbo had no money and disagreed with them, so he asked Zhu Yingtai to marry someone else. Liang Shanbo died of depression after he found out.
Before his death, he told his parents that he would be buried on the way from Zhu Yingtai to Ma's home. On Zhu Yingtai's wedding day, her maid found Liang Shanbo's grave, and told Zhu Yingtai that Zhu Yingtai went to Liang Shanbo's grave regardless of other people's objections. Suddenly, there was thunder and lightning, and Zhu Yingtai jumped into the crack in Liang Shanbo's grave. Then, they became a pair of butterflies.
Related introduction:
The story of China and Liang Zhu, which spread overseas, was first discovered in neighboring North and South Korea. Recent studies have found that from the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms to the Song Dynasty (9 18- 1200), the seven-rhythm poem Butterfly written by Ye Luo in the Tang Dynasty has been compiled into Ten Copied Poems by people in the Korean Kingdom, and one of them, The Popular Saying about Wife's Righteousness Clothes, refers to the story of Liang Zhu and has been disguised as.
By the Song Dynasty in China, the Notes on Ten Famous Poems edited by Koreans not only included Ye Luo's Butterfly, but also added the biographies of Liang Shanbo and Zhu Yingtai in the notes. This is the earliest version of Liang Zhu's story spread abroad, which tells the legendary story of Liang Zhu from "dressing up as a man" to "changing clothes into butterflies".