Shun, a legendary ancient emperor and one of the five emperors, was named Yao, Zhong Hua and Shi Yu, and was called Yu Shun in history. According to legend, his father Gu Sou, stepmother and half-brother tried to kill him many times: Shun set fire to the barn while repairing the roof of the barn, and Shun jumped off with two hats to escape; Shun dug a well and Xiang Ke went down to fill it. Shun dug a tunnel to escape. Afterwards, Shun was not jealous, but still obeyed his father and loved his younger brother. His filial piety touched the Emperor of Heaven. Shun cultivates in Lishan, elephants plow the fields for him, and birds weed for him. Hearing that Shun was very filial and capable of handling political affairs, Emperor Yaodi married his two daughters. After years of observation and test, Shun was chosen as his successor. After Shun ascended the throne, he went to see his father, still respectfully, and made him a vassal.
Later generations have a poem: the team is like spring ploughing, and the grass and birds are ploughing. Inheriting Yao Deng's position, Xiaogan was moved.
2. Original text
Yu Shun, your son. Filial piety Father is stubborn, mother is arrogant and brother is proud. There are elephants and birds for farming in Mount Li. Its filial piety is like this. Hearing this, Emperor Yao married nine men and two women, so he gave way to the world.
3. Source
Xiaogan Moving Heaven is the first story in Twenty-four Filial Pieties, which tells the story of Yu Shun's filial piety moving heaven. The full name of Twenty-four Filial Pieties is Selected Poems of Twenty-four Filial Pieties, which is a collection of stories about filial piety by twenty-four filial sons from different angles, different environments and different experiences.