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The most eye-catching chapters are: the style of Japan during the Heiankyo period, revealing human nature, and the struggle in the palace, reflecting the powerless status and miserable life of women at that time, and is called Japan's "national treasure".
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In the final chapter, I dream of the pontoon bridge, the pontoon boat falls into the nuns, and I am determined not to meet the old man at sunset, which is the best ending, but I have a sense of unfinished business, and I want to see what unexpected things happened later.
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The storyline is quite twisty and the characters are very vivid.
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I haven't read it, and I can't give a general idea.
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I haven't seen it, I don't know very well.
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I feel like a lot of thinking in it is strange, and it's very interesting.
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I haven't seen a lot of it, so I don't know much about it.
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Beautiful and lovely Miss Momoda. Women, are they cute because they are beautiful, or are they beautiful because they are cute? It's never a clear question.
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There are really many chapters in The Tale of Genji that attract attention, and the first chapter is.
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The Tale of Genji depicts the life of Japanese aristocratic society through Genji's relationships with women of all walks of life and his political ups and downs, and expresses the intrigue between the aristocracy and their spiritual emptiness and corruption in life.
The Tale of Genji is full of a strong sense of impermanence and fatalism, using karma and a sense of sin to connect Genji's relationships with characters such as Kiritsu, Shihime, Fumikun and Hime-kun, and Ukifune, and their misanthropy—some of them hope for the happiness of their blind grandsons in the next life, some of them retreat, and some of them become monks—and there is a causal relationship with their behavior. Despite this, its foothold is not to promote the Buddha's teachings.
Doctrine, but to show the hidden "mourning" within, to give "material mourning."
to reconcile the value meaning of good and evil.
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The Tale of Genji is a novel written by the Japanese Heian period female writer Iwamu Shikibu**, and "Monogatari" is a Japanese literary genre. The work is generally believed to have been written between 1001 and 1008. "The Tale of Genji" is set in the heyday of Japan's Heian Dynasty, describing the life experience and love story of the protagonist Genji, with a total of 54 chapters and nearly one million words.
Including four generations of emperors, more than 70 years, involving more than 400 people, including 20 or 30 people with distinct impressions. The characters are mainly upper-class nobles, but there are also middle- and lower-class nobles, palace maids, maids and ordinary people. It reflects the cultural life and social background of the Heian period.
There are 5 types of nystagmus in clinical practice: 1. Ophthalmogenic tremor Most of them have severe damage to central vision and some kind of eye disease, such as congenital cataract, albinism, corneal leukoplakia or staphyloma, etc., and most of them are pendulum-shaped horizontal tremor. 2. Labyrinthine nystagmus is mainly caused by middle and inner ear diseases, which is horizontal, but there are fast and slow phases, accompanied by vertigo, hearing loss, and balance disorders. >>>More
Nystagmus is an involuntary, rhythmic, back-and-forth eye movement. The direction is divided into horizontal, vertical, and rotational type, with the horizontal type being the most common. Mainly caused by genetic mutations, nystagmus is not an independent disease, but a clinical manifestation of some diseases, nystagmus needs to be carried out for **, and reproductive intervention can be carried out through genetic testing to prevent the occurrence of nystagmus.
The contents of the eye include aqueous humor, lens, and vitreous. The external light is refracted through the cornea and the transparent contents, focused on the retina of the fundus, and then converted into nerve impulses through the photosensitive transposition of the optic cells, which are transmitted to the visual center of the brain through the optic nerve and optic duct to produce vision. >>>More
Ocular contents include aqueous humor, lens, and vitreous. Often collectively referred to along with the cornea as the refractive interstitium of the eye. It is characterized by being transparent, non-vascular, and has a certain refractive index to ensure the passage of light.
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