1. Falling in love is the process of getting married, and getting married is the purpose of falling in love. ——Arthur Schopenhauer (German: Arthur Schopenhauer, February 22, 1788 - September 21, 1860), a famous German philosopher. He was the first person in the history of philosophy to openly oppose rationalist philosophy and pioneered irrationalist philosophy. He was also one of the founders and main representatives of voluntarism, believing that the will to life is the force that dominates the operation of the world. Source: "On the Foundation of Morality"
2. The most beautiful things in the world, such as peacocks, lilies, etc., are the most useless things. ——Ruskin John (1819-1900), British writer and art critic. His comments on society made him regarded as a moral leader or prophet. He spoke highly of the artistic works of the early Renaissance and denied the secular and sensual art of the Renaissance. Source: "Leave it to this latecomer"
3. Beauty is like summer fruit, which is easy to rot and does not last long. ——Francis Bacon (Francis Bacon, 1561-1626), 1st Viscount St Alban, was the most important essayist and philosopher of the English Renaissance. Bacon was a rationalist rather than a worshiper of superstition, an empiricist rather than a sophist; in politics he was a realist rather than a theoretician. He once said in "New Tools": "Knowledge is power." Source: "The Great Revival of Academics"
4. Fierce words reflect the weakness of the reasons. ——Victor Hugo (February 26, 1802 - May 22, 1885), French writer, representative writer of positive romantic literature in the early 19th century, representative figure of humanism, French literary history An outstanding bourgeois democratic writer, he is known as the "Shakespeare of France". Source: "Oriental Poetry Collection"
5. The value of life is not measured by time, but by depth. ——Leo Nikolayevich Tolstoy (Лев Николаевич Толстой; September 9, 1828 - November 20, 1910), Russian critical realist writer, thinker, and philosopher in the mid-19th century, Representative works include "War and Peace", "Anna Karenina", "Resurrection", etc. Source: "Resurrection"
6. After death, I knew that everything was in vain, but I was not as sad as Jiuzhou. Wang Shibei set the Central Plains Day, and he never forgot to tell Naiwen during family sacrifices. ——Lu You (1125-1210), a Chinese writer, historian and patriotic poet in the Southern Song Dynasty. Source: "Shi'er"
Translation:?
I originally knew that when I die, everything in the world will have nothing to do with me; but the only thing that makes me sad is I was not able to see the reunification of the motherland with my own eyes.
Therefore, when the day comes when the Song army regains the lost land in the Central Plains, you hold family sacrifices and don’t forget to tell your father the good news!