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A poem describing justice
Strength comes from justice. Lincoln, the first 16 president of the United States.

Justice produces clarity, while partiality produces ambiguity. Xun Kuang, a famous justice, was a thinker at the end of the Warring States Period.

Everybody's heart, everything is fine. Fang Xiaoru, a writer in Ming Dynasty

Sincerity is the foundation of justice. Cicero, an ancient Roman statesman

Justice is the purpose of governance. British writer Dan Defoe

When dew rains, it won't steal anything. A famous saying about justice

During the Warring States Period, there were nobles such as Lu Chunqiu Meng. Private: preference. Rain and rain are fair to everything in the world, and it will not fall on one thing alone because of preference. Through natural phenomena, it shows that we should be fair in managing politics and doing things. The truth of not favoritism.

At the end of the Warring States Period, Lv Buwei, a businessman and politician, wrote Lu Chunqiu, Meng Ji Chun, Returning to the Public.

Peace comes from the masses, and the masses come from the Tao.

Da Le in the Spring and Autumn Period of the State of Lu in the Warring States Period is impartial and selfless. Tao: Morality. It means that peace comes from justice and justice comes from morality.

At the end of the Warring States Period, Lv Buwei, a businessman and politician, wrote Da Le in the Spring and Autumn Period of Lu.

If the heart is public, people are harmonious.

If Tang Yaochong can achieve justice in his heart, people will be highly peaceful.

Yao Chong, a statesman in Tang Dynasty

The more laws, the less justice. British historian Toe Fuller

Delaying justice is injustice. Lando, a famous saying of justice

The public is bright, but the sincerity is powerful. Zhu Shunshui, an Enlightenment Educator in the Late Ming and Early Qing Dynasties.

Conscience is a just and honest judge. Ramonas

Speak for the public and be impartial. Ban Gu, a historian of the Eastern Han Dynasty

The public is wise, and the selfless is upright. Famous sayings about justice: Huangdi Jing, Huangdi Jing.

Evil harms heaven, and clouds drown the sky.

The Last Poem by San Guorong. Yi: Cover it up. The general idea of these two sentences is: slander and evil, honest and kind people are like floating in the sky and covering the bright sun. This famous sentence was recreated with the artistic conception of "floating to cover the sun, falling without regard for rebellion" in Nineteen Ancient Poems. With the writing technique of "comparison" and common vivid images such as "floating" and "day", the real and intuitive phenomena in life are vividly displayed, forming a strong contrast, which makes people clear at a glance. It can be used to expose the harm of slanders and the abomination of treacherous court officials.

Kong Rong, a litterateur in the Eastern Han Dynasty, wrote his last poems.

Gao Che Li Fu is the capital, and you are brilliant, and you are haggard.

See Du Fu's Li Bai's Dream. Crown cover: the crown is a hat, the cover is a car cover, and it is an official costume and a car ride. Jinghua: Kyoto. Gaunt: A thin and listless appearance. There are many powerful people in the capital of Gao Guanhua, but only such a great poet has been driven to the end of the road and plunged into hot water. In the first year of Gan Yuan, Li Bai was demoted to Yelang, and Du Fu wrote this poem after hearing the news. The poet thinks that there is no place where Li Bai lives in the vast Chang 'an, but there are no Li Bai in many places. It is unfair to exile him to Yelang and make him suffer. This poem compares Gao Guanhua Gay, a powerful man in the capital, with Li Bai's laziness in exile, which shows that the court is unfair to Li Bai. It can be used to express sympathy for people who have been treated unfairly.

Li Bai's Dream by Du Fu, a poet in Tang Dynasty