When it rains in Phoenix, Quigo.

Kuige Pavilion, also known as Kuixing Pavilion, is located at the western end of Phoenix Terrace. In the thirty-fourth year of Kangxi in Qing Dynasty (1695), I visited Lu Chaojian and experienced three constructions and three ruins. Before this reconstruction, there was another wall in the pavilion, with a residual height of more than 20 feet.

In ancient times, Kuige was a geomantic building that sheltered Chaozhou ancient city from cultural prosperity and talented people. Kuixing is a god in ancient China mythology, commonly known as Kuixing. It was originally one of the 28 huts in ancient astronomy and was called Su Kui. Later, it was called the god who dominated the rise and fall of articles, and later generations built Kuixing Pavilion to worship it. Before each imperial examination, students came one after another, praying for success. At ordinary times, literati boarded Sige and recited poems to enjoy the scenery, so Kuige on Phoenix Island became a particularly active place for Chaozhou cultural activities.

Now the pavilion is more than 70 feet high, divided into three floors, standing on the river, magnificent. The pavilion on the first floor has five doors and eight pillars. The wall composed of eight pillars constitutes an octagonal wall, which is a standard gossip figure. Among the five doors, the main entrance faces Beidou, which means that the scholar is engaged in the most brilliant career; Northwest Gate to Que Constellation; The southeast gate is opposite to the comet, symbolizing the purple gas coming from the east; The southwest gate and northeast gate are symmetrical with the southeast gate and northwest gate, which makes the layout of the five gates neat and orderly. On the first floor, Lv Dongbin, one of the Eight Immortals, placed Lu Xian's seat; The plaque at the main entrance is "Kuige". The second floor is dedicated to Emperor Wenchang and Emperor Guan Sheng, with Emperor Wenchang on the left and Emperor Guan Sheng on the right. The plaque at the main entrance is "Wen Jing Wei Wu". The third floor worships the god of Kuixing, the Li Kui constellation, the animal god with a pen in one hand and a bucket in one hand, that is, the so-called Kuixing (Kuixing) bucket in the world; The plaque at the main entrance reads "Wen Yao rises to heaven", with four dragons at the top of the pavilion, and the magic pen is in the sky. It expresses people's eager pursuit of cultural knowledge.