Current location - Quotes Website - Excellent quotations - Famous quotes from the Romance of the Three Kingdoms
Famous quotes from the Romance of the Three Kingdoms

1. The journey of a husband and gentleman is to cultivate one’s character through tranquility, and to cultivate one’s virtue through frugality. If it is not indifferent, it will not clear its ambitions, and if it is not tranquil, it will not be far-reaching. ——Zhuge Liang

Zhuge Liang’s character traits mainly include resourcefulness, magnanimity, superb personality, and loyalty.

2. The general is entrusted with the name of obedience, but internally he is suspicious of his opinions. Things are urgent and constant, and the disaster will never end! ——Kong Ming

Kong Ming is a diligent, knowledgeable, alert, loyal, steady, profound, resourceful and generous person.

3. A man who is born in heaven and earth and acts without knowing his master is unwise! How can I not regret dying today? ——Tian Feng

Tian Feng’s character is too resolute and very thoughtful.

4. They are all generous on the outside and taboo on the inside. They like to make plans but cannot make decisions. They have talents but cannot use them. They hear good things but cannot accept them. ——Chen Shou

Chen Shou's "Let your emotions be calculated, and don't care about old evils" and Guo Jia's "Simple on the outside but clever on the inside."

5. Cutting off generals and lifting flags to intimidate the battlefield also leaves the generals in their responsibilities, which is not appropriate for the lord. I wish to restrain my strength, cultivate my courage, and have plans for king and domination. ——Zhang Zhao

Zhang Zhao has a straightforward temperament, dares to offend Yan's advice, and never takes advantage of others.

Extended information:

The Structural Art of the Romance of the Three Kingdoms——

The story of the Three Kingdoms basically takes the rise and fall of the three kingdoms of Wei, Shu, and Wu as the vertical line, with the development and development of the war Character activities serve as materials. The history of rise and fall over more than ninety years can be roughly divided into three main stages. That is, the first stage is from the Yellow Turban Rebellion to the Battle of Chibi. The second stage was from the establishment of the Three Kingdoms to Zhuge Liang's death.

After that, the third stage was the unification of the world by the Jin Dynasty. Interspersed with the intricate disputes between Wei, Shu and Wu, various large and small wars and the cunning schemes of civil servants and generals are brought out one by one, and finally a complete big story is formed.

Because the structural rounds of traditional chapter novels echo back and forth, following the development of the main line, there is concentration in the dispersion, and consistency from beginning to end, forming a unified novel system.