I give seven specific contents:
Cut off all retreat
At the end of the Qin Dynasty, Qin Jun attacked the re-established Zhao State, and Zhao asked Chu for help. Chu will lead Xiang Yu across the river to attack Qin Jun. After crossing the river, Xiang Yu ordered his soldiers to sink all warships and smash all cooking utensils. Chu Jun had no way out, and everyone fought bravely and finally defeated Qin Jun.
Li Fen, Kong Rong
When Kong Rong was a child, his uncle once gave him a difficult problem, asking him to give six pears to six brothers and sisters, but there must be one pear on the plate. Clever Kong Rong came up with a way to divide pears satisfactorily.
Fan Kuai rushed into the palace.
Fan Kuai, a general of the Han Dynasty, rushed to Beijing because of an emergency, only to learn that Liu Bang, the Emperor of the Han Dynasty, had slept for several days and ignored state affairs. Fan Kuai rushed all the way through the body-guard's block and broke into the inner court of the palace. Later, with Fan Kuai's outspoken advice, Liu Bang repented and turned over a new leaf. Get dressed and go to court at once.
Zhuge de kolu
During the Three Kingdoms period, Sun Quan, the prince of Wu, teased Zhu Gejin with a donkey at the banquet. Zhu Gejin's youngest son, Zhuge Ke, was witty and clever, which not only relieved his father's embarrassment, but also gained the appreciation of the prince of Wu. The prince of Wu gave the donkey to Zhuge Ke.
The emperor and the assassin
At the end of the Warring States period, after the army of Qin captured Zhao, it attacked Yan. Jing Ke, a strong man, volunteered to go to Qin. When Jing Ke presented Fan's head and a map of Zhao to Qin Shihuang, Jing Ke took out a dagger from the map and stabbed Qin Shihuang. But it failed in the end, and Jing Ke died heroically.
Let the person who hung the bell around the tiger's neck take it off ― whoever started the trouble should end it.
Tai Qin, a young monk, is very clever, but once he was kicked out of the temple because he violated the temple rules by drinking. The monk asked questions in public, but the monk couldn't answer them. Taiqin understood what Master meant and gave the correct answer.
Juvenile Liu Gongquan
Liu Gongquan, a calligrapher in the Tang Dynasty, wrote a good hand when he was a teenager, but an old man told him that someone could write better with their feet, and Liu Gongquan was dissatisfied. After seeing it with his own eyes, he was finally able to ask for advice modestly and understood the truth that he could not be complacent.