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Introduction to the Inscription of Bodhisattva Man Tongquan Suyun Hanzhu
Bodhisattva Man is a folk song in the Tang Dynasty, which was later used as a epigraph as well as a qupai. Also known as "Bodhisattva Hao", also known as "Midnight Song" and "Stacking Gold". In the middle and old age, Nu Wa sent envoys to pay tribute. They are wearing jewels, gold crowns on their heads and high bun, which makes people feel like bodhisattvas. At that time, the workshop made a Bodhisattva Manqu, and later the Bodhisattva Manqu became an inscription. There are also "Bodhisattva Full Tone" and "Bodhisattva Full Tone". "Bodhisattva Man" is also the name of the Qupai belonging to the main palace of Beiqu Opera, and its sentence meter is the same as the first half of the Qupai, which is used in the divertimento. This rhyme changes sentence by sentence. Each rhyme is easy to rhyme, even, and expresses deep ups and downs with complex sounds to promote festivals. It has always been the most famous work.

"Bodhisattva Man" is a 44-word disyllabic poem, a short poem, consisting of five or seven words. The text format of the last two sentences in the next film is the same as the last two sentences. There are four sentences in the upper and lower films, all of which are two rhymes and two flat rhymes. The five-character phrase "Pingping" is often used before and after the last sentence, and it can also be replaced by the common sentence "Pingping".