Current location - Quotes Website - Famous sayings - About reading a collection of famous quotes and life philosophy
About reading a collection of famous quotes and life philosophy

Succeeding in the Great Change, and getting more than you expected, will be a joy for those who are ignorant, but only those who know deeply will be disappointed. ——Liang Qichao

14. Friendship is a tree that can provide shade. —— Coleridge

15. He who cannot rest cannot work. ——Lenin

16. When man reaches the perfection of morality, he is the most outstanding animal among all animals; but if he insists on his own way, Without law and justice, he becomes the worst of all beasts. ——Aristotle

17. A career lasts indefinitely. ——Han Yu

18. Love will flourish only when it is free and unrestrained. The idea that love is some kind of obligation can only kill love. Just one sentence: You should love someone is enough to make you hate that person to the core. ——Russell

19. If you are too indulgent in youth, you will lose the nourishment of your soul; if you are too restrained, you will become stubborn. ——Saint Buffo

20. There are many hardships in life, so we should not be too sensitive to every slight injury. In the face of life's hardships, mental strength and indifference are our best weapons against evil and life's accidents. ——Locke

21. The more books I read, the closer I get to the world, the more I understand the meaning of life, and the more important I feel about life. ——Golky

22. The clearest style is formed by ordinary language. ——Aristotle

23. You can get ideas from others, but your method of thinking, that is, the mold in which your ideas are molded, must be your own. ——Ram

24. The only thing that remains unchanged in the world is the truth that "everything is constantly changing." ——Sri Lanka

25. The so-called equality means that the poor do not take advantage of the rich. ——Aristotle

26. True friendship should be the same regardless of the pros and cons. , it is impossible to see a rose from the front but a thorn from the back. - Lucter

27. A person's value to society first depends on how much his feelings, thoughts and actions contribute to promoting human interests.

——Einstein