Zhuge Liang’s famous sayings mainly include:
Aim high.
The journey of a 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 aspirations, and if it is not peaceful, it will not be far-reaching.
Without learning, there is no way to expand talents, and without ambition, there is no way to achieve learning.
Big things start from difficulty, small things start from easy.
If you want to think about its benefits, you must think about its harms; if you want to think about its successes, you must think about its failures.
If there is literature, there must be weapons.
Be noble but not arrogant, be victorious but not disobedient, be virtuous but be able to subordinate, be strong but be able to endure.
Gou lives his life in troubled times and does not seek to learn and reach the princes.
Zhuge Liang (181-234), courtesy name Kongming and nickname Wolong, was a native of Yangdu, Langya (now Yinan County, Linyi City, Shandong Province). He was the prime minister of the Shu Han Dynasty during the Three Kingdoms period and an outstanding politician and military officer in ancient China. Home, inventor, writer.
Zhuge Liang's representative works of prose include "The Master's Guide" and "The Book of Commandments". He invented wooden cows and flowing horses, Kongming lanterns, etc., and modified the Liannu, called Zhuge Liannu. Zhuge Liang "dedicated his life to death" and was a representative figure of loyal ministers and wise men in traditional Chinese culture.