Library
Browse and search books
2 novels found

The Calamity is in the Sky
Xuanhuan劫道载天
Writer Hzn1jc
Come to China Literature's website to read more of my works!
Come to China Literature's website to read more of my works!

大清中兴第一臣
Writer Hzn1jc
He was a stupid boy from Xiangxiang who was haunted by numerology prophecies, a commander in chief of the Hunan Army who turned the tide from collapse, and a pillar of the late Qing Dynasty who received mixed praise and praise. From the embarrassment of being a scholar who failed seven times, to Mo Liao's lonely bravery when he came out to run a regiment training; from the desperate situation of drowning in Jinggang, to the peak of breaking the title of marquis in Beijing; from the strategy of reducing troops to protect himself, to the humiliation of Tianjin's teaching case in his later years. Zeng Guofan used "sincerity" as his blade and Neo-Confucianism as his bones, and he went through a life of mixed reputations and reputations in troubled times. He believed in destiny, and even more believed in "man can conquer nature". He used the "Twelve Daily Lessons" to smooth his mind, and achieved fame by "repeated defeats and battles". He was not a perfect man, but he was a lone brave man in that era who single-handedly shouldered the end of the dynasty.
He was a stupid boy from Xiangxiang who was haunted by numerology prophecies, a commander in chief of the Hunan Army who turned the tide from collapse, and a pillar of the late Qing Dynasty who received mixed praise and praise. From the embarrassment of being a scholar who failed seven times, to Mo Liao's lonely bravery when he came out to run a regiment training; from the desperate situation of drowning in Jinggang, to the peak of breaking the title of marquis in Beijing; from the strategy of reducing troops to protect himself, to the humiliation of Tianjin's teaching case in his later years. Zeng Guofan used "sincerity" as his blade and Neo-Confucianism as his bones, and he went through a life of mixed reputations and reputations in troubled times. He believed in destiny, and even more believed in "man can conquer nature". He used the "Twelve Daily Lessons" to smooth his mind, and achieved fame by "repeated defeats and battles". He was not a perfect man, but he was a lone brave man in that era who single-handedly shouldered the end of the dynasty.