Giving roses to others leaves a lingering fragrance in your hands. Helping others is a good virtue. Below are ancient poems and famous quotes about being helpful. Come and read it!
Ancient poems about being helpful to others
1. A gentleman values ??others but despises himself, putting others before himself.
2. The auxiliary cars are dependent on each other, and the lips are dead and the teeth are cold.
3. When the road is rough, draw your sword to help.
4. The patient’s illness is the worry of others.
5. Whenever there is an emergency, put others before yourself.
6. Good things must be given to each other, and bad things must not be pushed away.
7. The spring silkworms will not run out until they die, and the wax torch will not dry until it turns to ashes.
8. After harvesting the honey from hundreds of flowers, it will be sweet to whomever you work hard for.
9. Ask him how clear he is? Come for living water from a source.
10. With a cold eyebrow and a thousand fingers, he bows his head and is willing to be a Ruzi Niu. Famous quotes about helping others
1. The more I help others succeed, the more successful I become.
2. A person’s value should depend on what he has contributed, not what he has obtained.
3. If everyone loves public affairs, the world will be peaceful; if everyone is selfish, the world will be in chaos.
4. The meaning of life lies in giving, not in receiving, nor in striving for.
5. We learn to think in the process of our labor. As a result of our labor, we understand the mystery of the world, and then we truly change our lives.
6. Things that are obtained through effort are more popular than things that are obtained without effort. The truth that is obvious at a glance can be understood effortlessly. Once you understand it, you will feel temporarily happy, but it will soon be forgotten.
7. Do not rest on the achievements you have already made, but work bravely and strive to hold the championship of labor in your own hands for a long time.
8. I only believe in one thing: inspiration is generated during labor. . . . Labor is the best doctor of all dull senses.
9. I have loved both mental work and physical work all my life. Perhaps I even love physical work more. I feel even more satisfied when any excellent understanding, that is, the combination of hand and brain, is added to physical labor.
10. When you succeed in something, don’t wait to enjoy the honor. Do the necessary things again.