1. Love is the seed of virtue.
This sentence comes from the famous Italian poet Dante.
Dante is one of the pioneering figures of the European Renaissance. He is famous for his long poem "Divine Comedy". "Divine Comedy" is divided into three sections, the first section is called "Hell" and the second section is called "Hell". "Purgatory", the third section is called "Paradise", leaving a name for future generations. He is considered to be the greatest poet of the Italian Renaissance in the Middle Ages, as well as one of the most outstanding poets and one of the greatest writers in the West.
2. If there is no love in the world, the sun will also be destroyed.
This sentence comes from the French writer Hugo.
Hugo is a representative writer of positive romantic literature in the early 19th century, a representative figure of humanism, and an outstanding bourgeois democratic writer in the history of French literature. He is known as the "Shakespeare of France".
He wrote many poems, novels, scripts, various essays, literary reviews and political articles throughout his life, and has a wide influence in France and the world. His representative works include the novels "Notre Dame de Paris", "1993" and "Les Misérables", and the short story "The Disaster of the Normandy".
3. Those who love others will always be loved by others; those who respect others will always be respected by others.
From "Mencius Li Lou Chapter 2" by Mencius during the Warring States Period.
Interpretation: If you love others, others will always love you; if you respect others, others will always respect you.
4. Love can create miracles. Qiao Mai's destroyed love, once rebuilt, becomes more magnificent, more beautiful, and stronger than before.
This sentence comes from the British playwright Shakespeare.
Shakespeare is the most outstanding dramatist in the history of English literature. He is also one of the most important and greatest writers in the European Renaissance. He was the master of humanistic literature at that time and one of the most outstanding writers in the world. one. The Chinese community often honors him as Shakespeare.
His representative works include four major tragedies: "Hamlet", "Othello", "King Lear", "Macbeth", and his classic tragedy "Romeo and Juliet". In addition, many of his comedy works are classics, such as "A Midsummer Night's Dream", "The Merchant of Venice", "Twelfth Night", and "As You Like It".
5. Love is a fulfilled life, just like a wine glass filled with wine.
This sentence comes from the Indian poet Rabindranath Tagore.
Tagore is an Indian poet, litterateur, social activist, philosopher and Indian nationalist. His representative works include "Gitanjali", "Asky Birds", "Sand in the Eyes", "Four People", "Family and the World", "Gardener", "New Moon", etc.
Tagore was born into a wealthy aristocratic family in Calcutta, India. He was able to compose long poems and ode-style poems at the age of 13. Later he went to study in the UK and specialized in literary activities after returning to China. In 1913, he became the first Asian to win the Nobel Prize for Literature for "Gitanjali". In 1941, he wrote "The Crisis of Civilization", his last words indicting British colonial rule and believing that the motherland would be independent and liberated.