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Joey said: You can see the moon from Taiwan Province.
Joey said, you can see the moon from the slipway.

Said by: Fu, Six Chapters of a Floating Life, wandering around the world.

The daughter said, "You can see the moon from Taiwan Province." Is a window on the ladder door, winding out, that is, the top of the back tip. There are short columns on three sides, a bright moon and a vast sky.

Joey said, "You can see the moon from the slipway." We pushed a window from the top of the ladder door and climbed out of the window. That was the slipway, which was the top of the stern. There are short railings on three sides of the stage, forming an independent small world. A bright moon, reflected in the water, the water is wide and the sky is clear.

Six Chapters of a Floating Life is an autobiographical essay written by Shen Fu, a native of Changzhou in the 13th year of Yu Jiaqing in Qing Dynasty (1808). Yang Yinchuan, the brother-in-law of Wang Tao in the Qing Dynasty, found the remnant draft of Six Chapters of a Floating Life in a cold stall in Suzhou, with only four volumes, and gave it to Wang Tao, who was in charge of reporting Wenzunge in Shanghai at that time, and published it as movable type 1877.

Six Chapters of a Floating Life focuses on the life of the author and his wife, which is better than what they saw and heard in A Wandering World. It is an ordinary and interesting family life. The work describes that the author and his wife, Chen Yun, are congenial and want to live a life of food, clothing, housing and art. Due to the oppression of feudal ethics and the suffering of poor life, their ideals are finally shattered.

The text of this book is fresh and true, with no traces of carving and modification, and the plot is affectionate to death; It begins with joy, ends with worry, and gradually drifts away, making people sad and moving.