1. Song Lu You's "Winter Night Reading to Show Ziyu": After reading on paper, I will feel shallow and know that I must do it.
2. Song Zhuxi's "Reflections on Reading Books": Asking the canal how clear it is is because there is a source of living water.
3. Tang Hanyu's "Six Farewell Songs of the Eighteenth Yuan Dynasty": There are not many troubles in reading, but there are not many troubles in thinking about meaning. If you are satisfied with your own troubles, you will not learn, and if you have learned and troubled you, you will not be able to do it.
4. "Early Hair on the Autumn River" by Liu Yuxi of the Tang Dynasty: Faintly in love with pillow quilts, how can I meet the heroes of the world?
5. Song Chenghao's "Er Cheng Sui Shu": Knowing but not being able to do it means only knowing a little.
6. "Poems of Saving Trouble" by Su Che of the Song Dynasty: Reading in the early years will not make much sense, but saving troubles in later years will do wonders.
7. Song Dynasty Liu Guo's "Drunk Song of Duojinglou": Don't follow the examples to learn the "Six Tao" on paper, and don't follow the corrupt Confucians to annotate the "Five Classics" thoroughly.
8. "Wu Deng Hui Yuan·Niao Ke Daolin Zen Master's Reply to Bai Juyi" written by Jin Ji of the Song Dynasty: "Every three-year-old child knows this, but a centenarian man cannot do it."
9. "Miscellaneous Poems" by Liu Yan of the Qing Dynasty: Although reading is gratifying, how can we practice it diligently?
10. "Twenty-Two Rhymes Presented to Wei Zuocheng" by Du Fu of the Tang Dynasty: He has read thousands of volumes and written as if he had a spirit.
Old text:
1. "Shang Shu Taijia Xia": Don't worry about Hu Huo, don't do it for Hu Cheng.
2. Volume 3 of "Shangshu Yinyi" written by Wang Fuzhi of the Qing Dynasty: The learning of a gentleman must not be separated from practice to gain knowledge.
3. Han Bangu's "Book of Han: Biography of Dong Zhongshu": If you are envious of fish in the depths, it is better to retreat and build a net.
4. Tao Yuanming of Jin Dynasty's "Peach Blossom Spring": I don't know the Han Dynasty, so how can I talk about the Wei and Jin Dynasties?
5. "Annotations to the Four Books" by Zhu Xi of the Song Dynasty: It is difficult to know after doing it, and one cannot know it unless he does it diligently.
6. Sima Guang of the Song Dynasty, "Reply to Kong Wenzhong Si Hu Shu": A scholar is more valuable than doing something, but not knowing it.
7. Song Zhu Xi's "Zhu Xi's Collected Works: Reply to Lu Ziyue": Generally speaking, there are only two ways to learn, which is to practice knowledge and practice.
8. "Collected Works of the Yuan Dynasty" by Su Tianjue of Yuan Dynasty: It is not difficult to say something, but it is difficult to practice it.
9. "Ju Ye Lu·Xue" written by Hu Juren of the Ming Dynasty: the word "experience" is the most friendly to scholars.
10. "Shenyan·Xiaozong" by Wang Tingxiang of the Ming Dynasty: practice both knowledge and action.
11. Wang Shouren of the Ming Dynasty's "Reply to Gu Dongqiao": After all the learning in the world, there is no one who can't do it, but he can be called a scholar.
12. "Zhang Zizheng Meng's Notes" written by Wang Fuzhi of the Qing Dynasty: Although one knows well but cannot catch it, it is still as if one does not know.
13. Wang Fuzhi of the Qing Dynasty's "Book of Changes·Xici": Putting knowledge first, respecting knowledge and despising talents will lead to failure.
14. Wang Fuzhi of the Qing Dynasty's "Book of Changes·Xici 1": Knowledge from sight and hearing is not as good as the metaphor of the heart, and the metaphor of the heart is not as good as the action of the body.
15. Modern Wei Yuan's "Wei Yuan Ji": You will know later by following it, and it will be difficult after you follow it.
16. "Suiyuan Poetry" by Yuan Mei of the Qing Dynasty: The village boy Mu Shu, every word and smile, is my teacher, and I can learn from it well and turn it into a good poem.
17. "Book of Rites·Xue Ji": If jade is not polished, it will not become a tool; if a person does not learn, he will not know.
18. Liu Xie's "Wen Xin Diao Long· Zhiyin": You can know the sound by playing a thousand tunes, and you can know the weapon by observing a thousand swords.
19. "Shuo Yuan" by Liu Xiang of the Western Han Dynasty: Hearing with the ears is not as good as seeing with the eyes, and seeing with the eyes is not as good as practicing with the feet.
20. Xunzi's "Encouragement to Learning" of the Warring States Period: Wood will be straightened by ropes, and metal will be sharpened by sharpening.
21. Chapter 64 of "Laozi" in the Spring and Autumn Period: The tree that hugs each other is born from the smallest grain; the nine-story platform starts from the base soil; the journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.