Wash your hands and serve, and don’t use a penny to make a fool of yourself. ——Han Yu, a writer of the Tang Dynasty, "The Shinto Monument in the Cemetery of Hu Liang, the Supervisor of the Shaofu, a Supervisor in the Tang Dynasty"
The Shinto Monument in the Cemetery of Hu Liang, the Superintendent of the Shaofu and the Superintendent of the Tang Dynasty in the Ancient Tang Dynasty is written by Han Yu, a writer of the Tang Dynasty. Washing hands: Hands are as clean as washed and do not touch money, which is a metaphor for integrity. To serve: to perform one's duties. Dummy: Giver. The general meaning of these two sentences is: Be honest and loyal to the public, and never give a penny of the court's money to others privately. This is what Han Yu praised Hu Liang in his epitaph: "In the fourth year of Jianzhong's reign, the minister Zhao Zan served as the envoy of Duzhi, recommended the public to be the supervisory censor, and gave the main gift to the army east of the bridge." Now it can still be used as "wash your hands to enshrine it." The idiom "duty" praises cadres who are strict with themselves, honest, conscientious, and dedicated to their duties.
An honest person is a model of the people; a greedy person is a thief of the people. ——Bao Zheng, a famous minister and honest official in the Northern Song Dynasty, "Begging from officials without using stolen goods" Famous quotes about being honest and honest
Bao Zheng of the Song Dynasty "Begging from officials without using stolen goods". Table: example. The general idea of ??these two sentences is: Officials who are honest and dedicated are role models for the people, and officials who are corrupt and pervert the law are thieves of the people. These are two sentences from Bao Zheng's letter to the emperor. He regards upright officials as role models and regards corrupt officials as thieves of the people. He has a clear distinction between love and hatred and expresses the aspirations of the people. To this day, one can still observe like this.
Poverty, whether it is deserved or unfair, whether the person who suffers poverty is honest and honest or poor and has short ambitions, others will always ignore it when they see it. Yes, the smell of poverty is unpleasant, just like a room on the ground floor of a building with doors and windows leading to a narrow, unventilated patio, or clothes that are not changed frequently, which will definitely emit a foul and unpleasant smell. You always smell it yourself, as if you and I are just a puddle of smelly water. ——Austrian writer Zweig