Lu Xun’s famous sayings are as follows:
1. Of course people should survive
Of course people should survive, but for the sake of evolution; they may as well suffer, but for the sake of evolution. What is important is to relieve all suffering in the future; what is more important is to fight, but for reform. I don't give, I have no intention of giving, I just stand above the giver, giving away boredom, suspicion, and hatred.
2. You might as well be a rotten rotten grass
As long as you can cultivate a flower, you might as well be a rotten rotten grass. On the road of life, drop your blood drop by drop to feed others. Although I feel gradually getting thinner, I still feel happy. Since the inner body is solid, the nine thousand nine hundred and ninety-nine kinds of bad words from the outer world will be like the sound of blue flies silenced by the autumn wind.
3. Cultivate a flower
As long as you can cultivate a flower, you might as well become a rotten grass. It is enough to have a close friend in life, and this world should treat him with sympathy. Human beings will never be lonely, because life is progressive and optimistic.
4. Love my weeds
I love my weeds, but I hate the ground decorated with weeds. Most people are just a drop in the river of life, carrying the past and moving toward the future. If they are not really extraordinary, they will inevitably involve moving forward and looking back.
5. It is completely different from that of adults
The world of children is completely different from that of adults. If you do not understand it first and act recklessly, it will greatly hinder your development. Tragedy destroys the valuable things in life for people to watch, comedy tears up those worthless things for people to watch, and satire is just the first class of simplified comedy.
6. Increasingly perfunctory
Material civilization is becoming increasingly perfunctory, and human feelings are becoming increasingly superficial. Now that they are beautiful and lofty, noble feelings will only exist, and evil and dirty ones will remain. Thinking but not doing. It pierces the depths of the soul, causing people to suffer mental torture and obtain wounds. In other words, from the wounds, recuperation and healing, the pain is washed away and they embark on the road to rebirth.
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Lu Xun, whose original name was Zhou Zhangshou, later changed his name to Zhou Shuren, with the courtesy name Yushan, and later the courtesy name Henecai, was from Shaoxing, Zhejiang. Famous writer, thinker, revolutionist, educator, democratic fighter, important participant in the New Culture Movement, and one of the founders of modern Chinese literature.