Let me start with robespierre's life. I guess some brothers don't know much about it. This guy was one of the leaders of the French Revolution, and he was definitely a man of the hour. A little cold knowledge is that this group also had differences before the outbreak of the Great Revolution. Some people do not advocate supporting the king, but think that constitutional monarchy is a good idea.
Another group of people are naturally life and death, which means that either the king dies or we die. Because this group often meets in a club called jacobins, it is called jacobins. Robespierre is the representative of jacobins.
In fact, robespierre didn't take much part in the uprising, but after the uprising, he strongly demanded the execution of King Louis XVI and his wife, and started the killing circle in the subsequent ruling process, and was finally guillotined after a coup. So he didn't write the epitaph of the goods himself, someone else spoke for him. Its contents are as follows:
Passerby, don't be sad for me. If I live, none of you will live.
Epitaph of Japanese director Yasujirō Ozu:? Nothing?
Because, Yasujiro, there is only one? Nothing? Compared with Wu Zetian's wordless tablet, Chinese epitaph is more free and easy, more decisive and more intriguing. Although Wu Zetian's tablet without words is empty, what is left for later generations to comment on? Space and possibility.
On AnJiro's tombstone, there is no name, no date of birth and death, and a word is directly engraved? Nothing? . No, it's dead. When you die, you die like a lamp. When you close your eyes, everything is empty. Of course, this is only from the perspective of China's secular philosophy. But what about him? Nothing? Word, but it does have a lot to do with China.
1938, after Yasujirō Ozu came to China, the host of Nanjing Jiming Temple wrote him a picture with only one word on it? Nothing? .
As for why the host wrote such a sentence to him at that time, what was his intention and why he liked it so much that it was engraved on the tombstone after his death, of course, it would not be for no reason. I won't go into details here.
The wordless tablet of Wu Zetian, the only female emperor in China.