"The wind blows and the water cools, and the strong men are gone forever", which is a poem sung by Jing Ke when he left. After Jing Ke came to Qin, the king of Qin summoned him in Xianyang Palace. When Jing Ke presented a picture of Yan Du Kang, he was blacked out, stabbed to death the king of Qin and killed.
Origin: Jing Ke stabbed the king of Qin, which is selected from The Warring States Policy Yance III. It describes the tragic historical story of Jing Ke stabbing the king of Qin in the Warring States Period, reflects the social and political situation at that time, and shows Jing Ke's spirit of valuing righteousness over profit, resisting Qin violence and being brave in sacrifice.
Extended data:
Legend has it that Jing Ke was originally a descendant of Qi Guoqing's family, but later he moved to Weiguo and changed his surname to Jing. Jing Ke loved reading and fencing, and used fencing to lobby Wei, but Wei didn't appoint him. Since then, Qin attacked Wei, established Dongjun, and moved Wei's collateral relatives to the wild king.
Jing Ke strolls in Yuci and talks with Nie Gai about fencing. Nie Gai glared at him. After Jing Ke went out, it was suggested that Nie Gai call Jing Ke back again. Nie Gai said, "I just talked to him about fencing, and he talked about something inappropriate. I stared at him with my eyes; Go and find it. I stared at him. He should go and dare not stay here any longer. "
Send someone to Jing Ke's residence to ask the landlord that Jing Ke has left Yuci by car. When the dispatched personnel came back to report, Nie Gai said, "It's time to leave. I stared at him just now and he was afraid. " Jing Ke roamed Handan, and Kenji Lugou argued with Jing Ke about the way to the Expo. Gou Jian got angry and scolded him, but Jing Ke ran away without saying a word.