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Why are so many people black Capricorn?
Interestingly, although Capricorn has become a mascot, "Capricorn" was the least popular star in the Song Dynasty-people in the Song Dynasty loved "black Capricorn", just as people today especially loved the black Virgo (which made me very unhappy). It is said that Su Shi's friend Ma Mengde is also a Capricorn, and Su University deliberately mocked him (and laughed at himself): "Ma Mengde was born in the same year as a servant, and he was less than eight days old. He was born in the old days and had no wealth, but his servants and dreams were the crowns of poverty. It is up to the two of us to do it, and the first one is to push the dream. " Making fun of Ma Mengde's numerology is worse than him.

Many Capricorn Song people also write poems or laugh at the unsatisfactory astrology in their letters to friends. For example, Fang Dayan, a native of the Southern Song Dynasty, wrote to a friend: "Only the palace where scorpions are moved has the saying that the mother and son are punished together. Changli (Han Yu) slandered its value, and Po Lao (Su Shi) fell for it. And the situation is born, dare to climb the sages? " Mou Xun, who lived in the Li Zong Dynasty in the Southern Song Dynasty, also confessed to himself in his letter to his friends: "Everyone is embarrassed to grind the strange things in the Scorpion Palace."

After entering the Yuan Dynasty, many poets wrote the poem of "black" Capricorn, such as "Hold Yin Xiaoshan tight" by the poet Yin of the Yuan Dynasty: "I have suffered all my life, and my sorrow lies in Leiyang grave." At the end of the Yuan Dynasty, Zhao Lan's "The Rhyme of Mr. Chen" said: "I am too eager to drive two verticals, and I am too lazy to sharpen my own scorpions and seek three stars." Zhang Xuan, a scholar in the Ming Dynasty, wrote "Bai Hefeng pays homage to Su Wenzhong": "Whoever grinds scorpions and pities the sea, the foolish fairy is only in the world." Zhao Yi, a scholar in the Qing Dynasty, wrote "The lack of talent shocked the rest of my heart and made me cry": "A scholar is nothing more than a wise man who is willing to pay for grinding." Huang Jun's "New Year Feeling" in the late Qing Dynasty: "I gradually understand that the world is fortunate to grind scorpions, and I don't feel Gu Quan in my heart."