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The dying man speaks the truth. What does this famous saying mean? Does it work for some people?
We always think that "people are dying, words are still in our ears", but it is not necessarily true. For kind people, perhaps most of them are so kind, but it has nothing to do with death, but it is just nature. In other words, before dying, what kind people say is still good, and what unkind people say is not necessarily good. Good people sometimes joke about revenge when they die-occasionally "viciously". I have read a novel called Laughing in Heaven. It shows that an old man who is about to die left a will about his legacy before he died, so that his relatives who had shown all kinds of greed before his death had to do several things before they could write a formal written will or inherit a "huge" legacy, which caused those relatives to make a fuss, but there was nothing in the end-a punitive joke. For those so-called wicked people, when they die, there will still be vicious curses, and there are many people cursing all over the world; More is that what he said is true-making some "true confessions" and the like is not necessarily a good word. Of course, it does not rule out that some wicked people realize before they die that facing death is the biggest turning point in life after all, so it is well said. But this still has little to do with death, and it is closer to "putting down the butcher's knife and becoming a Buddha." It can happen at any time in life, not just before death. We call the death of those wicked people who have not improved "never repent" and "take Huagangyan's head to see God" as proof. In the west, Julius Caesar, the protagonist of the most perfect murder case in ancient Rome, even carefully designed to kill himself with a knife when he knew that he was dying, so that his main political opponent could be executed for murder at the same time, paving the way for his son to inherit the throne. It's not just a word "evil". During the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period in Chinese history, Wu Qi, who was in charge of Chu (absolutely evil enough to be a general, he would kill his wife), was pursued by his political enemies, and he knew that this was inevitable. Before he died, he deliberately ran to the palace to hug the dead king of Chu. The pursuers didn't know what to do, and the arrows were fired at random. Wuqi viciously shouted: I deserve to die, and you hate the king. And then he died laughing. Everyone ran away in fear. As a result, Wu Qizhe, who participated in the murder, was arrested and executed by the newly succeeded King Chu on the charge of "insulting the corpse of the King Chu", and more than 70 people were buried with him in Wuqi-was his words and deeds good?