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Famous aphorisms about honor and disgrace

Famous aphorisms about honor and disgrace

1. Honors given and received by people will not last long; worldly honors can only bring troubles to people. ——Thomas

2. Cherishing clothes should start from the time when they are new, and cherishing reputation should start from childhood. —— Pushkin

3. There is no laurel without hardship, no achievement without hardship, no honor without disaster. ——Anonymous

4. Honor is like a firefly. It shines brightly from a distance, but neither heats up nor shines very brightly when viewed up close. ——John Webster

5. It is better to dress simply and be reputable than to be wealthy and unknown. ——Aesop

6. The darlings of wealth or reputation have fallen before our eyes, but they cannot change our ambitions. ——Wowenag

7. Glory often does not come along the shining road. Sometimes it can be obtained through distant secular paths. ——Leonardo Da Vinci

8. The generation of honor is not limited by external conditions. With good conduct comes honor. ——Bobo

9. Except for work that can benefit mankind, there is no other cause in the world that can have a real and permanent reputation. ——Cha Sumner

10. Those who are righteous first and benefit later will be honored; those who are honored first and then righteous are disgraced. Those who are honored are always prosperous, and those who are humiliated are often poor. ——Xunzi

11. Take away your reputation from me and my life will be over. ——Shakespeare

12. There is nothing greater than shame. ——"Wen Zhongzi·Guan Lang"

13. Social honor comes from material possession, and sometimes it is more like a springboard to obtain this kind of possession. ——Frank Parkin

14. A vain person hides an ugly underwear with a gorgeous coat. ——Shakespeare

15. The more you drink, the more you will be thirsty. The same is true for fame. —— Schopenhauer

17. Reputation is the second life of life. ——Gerati

18. A good reputation is better than wealth, and favor is better than gold and silver. ——Anonymous

19. As long as I can maintain my honor, I will be quite wealthy. ——Platus

20. Honor is the daughter of time. ——Alan

21. Celebrities have different degrees of attachment to life, so their sensitivity to glory is also inconsistent. ——Montesquieu

22. There is no pain greater than not having heard it, and no humiliation greater than shamelessness. ——Wang Tong

23. Just because I forget about favor and disgrace, I won’t hurt my spirit here. ——Hui Yan

24. No matter how the gluttonous time devours everything, we must work hard to gain our reputation while this breath is still alive, so that the sickle of time cannot hurt us; our life can end, Our reputation will last forever. ——Shakespeare

25. Avoid shame, but don’t pursue glory. The price of nothing is greater than the price of glory. ——Sidney Smith

26. It is better to live in disgrace than to be famous in poverty, and to live in disgrace is worse than to die in glory. ——Wang Pinzhen

27. Fame and wealth are more important than alcohol, which makes people drunk until they wake up. ——Du Guangting

28. If we want to calculate rewards, then the greatest reward that can be obtained by noble virtue is glory. ——Cicero

29. Fulfillment of promises is the guarantee of reputation. ——French proverb

30. It is not shameful to admit poverty. On the contrary, not working to change poverty is truly shameful. ——Thucydides

31. Honor must be earned by our actions. ——Marlowe

32. Honor will not bring happiness to a person who steals it but does not deserve it. It can only cause happiness in the heart of a person who deserves it. Constant trembling. ——Gogol

33. Immortal reputation exists only in virtue. ——Petrarch

34. Five punishments are worse than one disgrace.

——Lu Kun's "Moaning Language·Government"

35. It is sad to live on the reputation of others. ——Juvenalis

36. Reputation can powerfully stimulate desire. ——Graham Green

37. The heart is clear about right and wrong, and the traces are about honor and disgrace. ——Xu Hun

38. Stick to your doctrine, doctrine is more important than life; you would rather life disappear, as long as your reputation can remain. ——Petofi

39. The honor of a good man is hidden deep in people's minds, not on everyone's lips. ——Thomas

40. Crown? It is temporary glory and permanent bondage. ——Bing Xin

41. Etiquette and righteousness are the great ways to govern people. ——History of the Five Dynasties "Feng Dao Zhuan"

42. A flawless reputation is the purest treasure in the world. Without reputation, human beings are nothing more than gilded dung and dyed mud. ——Shakespeare

43. The highest form of vanity is the love of fame. ——Santayana

44. It is a shame to succumb to authority. ——Anonymous

45. A person who gives up his reputation is equivalent to giving up his life. ( )——Arrettino

46. Those who are eager to win will fight, and those who are brave will be humiliated. ——Lin Bu

47. Honorary titles will not raise a person’s worth. A person’s honorary titles all depend on himself. ——John Ford

48. Dying for the benefit of the people is heavier than Mount Tai. ——Mao Zedong

49. Honors given and received by others will not last long; worldly honors can only bring troubles to people. —— Thomas

50. Those good achievements that have passed will disappear in people’s memory in the blink of an eye. Only by continuing to move forward can the honor be immortalized. ——Shakespeare

51. The responsibility of honor and disgrace depends on oneself and not on others. ——Wei Zheng

52. The reputation of romantic people will not last long, because the trend will pass. —— Rabpinyere

53. No matter how the gluttonous time devours everything, we must work hard to gain our reputation while this breath is still alive, so that the sickle of time cannot harm us; our lives It may be over, but our reputation will last forever. ——Shakespeare

54. Gains and losses come once, but honors and disgrace last a thousand years. ——Anonymous

55. No matter what kind of shame we suffer, we almost always have the ability to restore our own reputation. ——La Rochefoucauld