The east corner is gone, and it's not too late for mulberry.
Tang Wangbo's Farewell Preface to Teng Wangge in Autumn. East corner: where the sun rises. Sang Yu: It's a metaphor for twilight. Although the rising sun is lost, it is not too late to seize the sunset. This is also a famous sentence with metaphor as a symbol. It skillfully contains the philosophy of life and natural phenomena, and reveals the philosophy of life profoundly by natural phenomena, so that people's hearts can be purified and their concepts can be sublimated. It warns people that it is not too late to mend. As long as we can start from now, we can still radiate waste heat even in our twilight years. This is an aphorism to persuade people to fully realize their self-worth, which gives people the power of excitement and self-confidence, and there is a strong feeling of positive efforts between the lines.
Tang Dynasty poet Wang Bo's farewell preface to Tengwang Pavilion in Autumn
It's not too late to see rabbits and care for dogs; It's never too late to mend. Better late than never
Han Liuxiang's Warring States Policy Chu Ce IV. Gu Dog: Look back at the dog and let the dog chase the rabbit. Prison: sheepfold. It's not too late to greet the dog after seeing the rabbit. It's not too late to mend the sheepfold after the sheep is lost. The author uses these words as a metaphor to explain that mistakes should be corrected in time and experience should be summed up to reduce losses. It's not too late to release the dog after seeing the rabbit, although time is urgent; If the sheep has been lost, repair the sheepfold immediately. Although the lost sheep can't be found, it won't be lost again. This sentence shows that mistakes should be corrected in time, and mistakes should not be stubborn, otherwise it will cause more harm. "Better late than never" has become a frequently quoted idiom.
The Warring States Policy Chu Ce IV by Liu Xiang, a scholar and writer of the Western Han Dynasty.