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Poems about leaving a bad reputation
1. Poems with ruined reputation

1. My humble position did not dare to forget my concern for my country-Song Luyou's Book of Illness

2. An inch of mountains and rivers and an inch of gold-Qing Zunxian's Gift to Ren Liang's parents in the same year

3. I died in a national disaster, and I suddenly felt as if I had died-Three Kingdoms. The soul of the son is a ghost hero-The Mourning of the Country by Chu Qu Yuan in the Warring States Period

5. But make the Dragon City fly, and don't teach Huma to cross the Yinshan Mountain-Tang Wang Changling's

6.

-Dan Tianfang, a master of storytelling and performing arts, has a reputation as the sun of the dead. -Balzac, French writer, famously said that a leopard dies, but a man dies.

—— Ouyang Xiu, a writer and historian in the Northern Song Dynasty, Biography of Wang Yanzhang, and Song Ouyang Xiu, Biography of Wang Yanzhang. Leopard leaves beautiful fur after death, and people leave a good reputation after death.

There are folk proverbs with similar meanings to these two sentences, such as "The wild goose keeps its voice, and the man keeps his name", which all emphasize that when people come to the world, they should work hard, make positive progress, or make a great contribution to the country and the nation. Or make achievements in some aspects and set an example for future generations. In this way, after death, you can leave a good name for people to admire and miss.

This famous sentence can be used to encourage young people to work hard and strive to create extraordinary career tracks in ordinary posts and make a name for themselves in history. You can also use the honor of "emphasizing that life is alive, you should lead an honest and clean life, and keep your heart clean."

fame does not last long, but life is easy to die. -Zhong Changtong, a philosopher and political commentator at the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, was a gentleman who was ill and nameless.

—— Confucius, a thinker and educator in the Spring and Autumn Period and the founder of Confucianism, saw The Analects of Confucius and Wei Linggong in The Analects of Confucius and Wei Linggong. Gentleman: refers to a person with high morality.

disease: worry, worry. No (last) life: life.

no, until it's over. Say: praise, praise.

The main idea of this sentence is that a gentleman is most worried that his life-long reputation will not be praised. Fame records the merits and demerits of a person's life and marks the value of a person's life. Therefore, all people with lofty ideals have cherished their reputation throughout the ages.

If you want to win a good reputation, you should be conscientious, cautious and responsible for your actions all your life. We should be diligent and strive to make contributions to the motherland and the people, but we should not be idle and idle, and we should not do evil and run amok.

This famous sentence can be quoted when advising teenagers to cherish their own reputation. Only virtue is an eternal reputation.

-Italian scholar Petrarch's famous saying about fame. Love for fame is the strongest vanity. -American philosopher and poet Santayana's reputation is like the sun and the moon, and his achievements are like heaven and earth.

-Xun Kuang, Xunzi Wang Ba by Xunzi, a thinker at the end of the Warring States Period, and Xunzi Wang Ba by Xun Kuang in the Warring States Period. The general idea of these two sentences is that a person's reputation is as high as the sun and the moon, shining all over the world; The contribution is as great as the sky and the earth, covering everything.

Xunzi thinks that such a figure can make "the people in the world respond like a scene (shadow)"; This means that the selected characters will be supported by the people, with appeal and cohesion, and "follow the shadow, like a sound." Now it can be used to praise people with high reputation and great contributions.

if you don't seek fame, you will get rid of defects. -Wang Jian, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, suffered from a reputation that did not stand, and it was not long before he stopped.

—— The biography of the Three Kingdoms, Wei Shu and Jia Kui by Chen Shou, a historian in the Western Jin Dynasty. Suffering from: anxiety. Fear.

name: a good reputation. Year: refers to the tooth of the year, Tao Ming.

The general idea of these two sentences is: I'm afraid that a good reputation won't be established, and I'm not afraid that my life will be short. When Cao Cao entered the temple in Jia Kui during his crusade, he recalled the achievements of this general under his command and expressed this feeling with sadness. People living in the world should cherish not only their own lives, but also their own reputations.

Liu Hulan, Dong Cunrui, Huang Jiguang and other revolutionary martyrs contributed their young lives to the liberation of the motherland and people. Although their life span is not long, they can go down in history and shine through the ages.

If a person lives quietly and makes no positive contribution to Du Hui, even if he lives a long life, he will have no value. This famous sentence can be used to encourage young people to work hard for the motherland and the people.

True fame is beyond vanity. -Leon is not afraid of bad reputation, and he is afraid of being ignorant.

—— Taiwan Province romance novel writer Xi Juan's "Tilting the Stars" can be attributed to the stringed instrument, and its name can remain on bamboo and silk. -Zhao Ye, a scholar of Han Dynasty, Biography of Wu Yue Chun Qiu Gou Jian Cutting Wu, and Zhao Ye, Biography of Wu Yue Chun Qiu Gou Jian Cutting Wu.

sound and name: both refer to fame, and the two sentences have different meanings. Chord: stringed and wind instruments, generally referring to music, here refers to composing songs to sing.

bamboo and silk: bamboo slips and white silk for writing, which refer to ancient books. Fame can be composed into music, put into the history books, sung for generations, and immortalized for generations.

These two sentences can be summarized as idioms of "being orchestral" and "being famous in history", which are used to praise people's good reputation and great contributions, and will always be sung and praised, and will last forever in history. It is sad to live on the reputation of others.

—— The famous saying of the ancient Roman poet Euvenalis about fame is that goodness is not foreign, and fame can't be faked. The reputation of Qu Yuan, a patriotic poet dure that warring state period, sometimes produced some useless things.

-Thomas, a British theologian and historian, mistakenly spent his whole life as an official, and it is easier to become famous when he abandons his home. -Wu Weiye, a poet in the late Ming and early Qing Dynasties, "From Sigh" and Wu Weiye, "From Sigh".

The general idea of these two sentences is: It is this official position that has delayed my whole life. It is easy to abandon my family, but how difficult it is to change my reputation of being humble and honest. Wu Weiye was a famous poet in the late Ming Dynasty. He was once the editor and editor of the Imperial Academy of the Ming Dynasty, and he was an illegitimate son. After the Ming Dynasty's death, the official imperial academy sacrificed wine, so he was criticized by people of that time.

This poem is his own sigh, reflecting his remorse and depressed mood. Can be used to indicate that we must be very cautious in the right and wrong, so as not to "make a mistake and make a lasting regret."

contempt for fame leads to contempt for virtue. -Jonson, English Renaissance playwright and poet, famously said that a famous person is a real guest, and there is beauty and evil, and the name will follow.

—— Song Dynasty poet He Tan's Old People's Proverbs in Xichou Song He Tan's Old People's Proverbs in Xichou. Bing: From.

The general idea of these words is that reputation is the follower of actual behavior, and there are beauty and ugliness in behavior, and the quality of reputation also follows according to the beauty and ugliness of actual behavior. Name and reality are born together.

name and reality depend on each other and complement each other. There must be a name for what is actually there, and those who are not worthy of the name cannot stand the test of history. It is more embarrassing to have a reputation and not be understood than to have no reputation.

-romain rolland, French thinker and writer. After all, people who take risks just for fame are stupid. -Stevenson, Scottish writer "A Record of the British Navy" It is more important to have a good reputation than to have money.

-Cyrus about fame. 3. The idiom

describing a person's bad reputation spreads far and wide.

Source: The True Biography of Song Shu Lu Lingxiao's Offering Wang Yi: "The coolness of Xianyang spreads far and wide."

I can't stand it: bear it. The stink is unbearable. Metaphor people have a very bad reputation.

Source: If the East China Sea is written by Tang Zongyuan: "It's a shame to stir up its rhinoceros for fun, but it's a shame to take the sewage and mud from the sea."

it stinks. it stinks unbearable. Metaphor people have a very bad reputation.

Source: See: "Stinky"

Notorious name: reputation; Yang: Communication. Bad reputation spreads far and wide.

notorious: remarkable. It is well known to describe a bad reputation. Also known as "notorious".

everyone knows the bad reputation.

Source: Chapter 1 of Hong Bo Qu by Guo Moruo: "They are from He Zhonghan system, and they are notorious for beating dogs to eat in front." 4. Idioms that describe it is difficult to maintain a good reputation and easy to ruin it

Idioms about reputation: as we all know, everyone knows it.

oblivion: oblivion; Unknown: I don't know Fame is buried and no one knows.

Being famous in one fell swoop originally meant being famous in the world once you won the imperial examination. The back finger suddenly became famous.

a lasting legacy: a bad name left after death. After death, the notoriety has been circulated and will always be reviled.

make a name for yourself: spread it; Remarkable: prominent; Pro: Parents. Instruct parents to show off and spread their fame.

show one's family and make a name for oneself: prominent; Pro: parents; Yang: spread it. Instruct parents to show off and spread their fame.

showing one's surname and fame means showing one's family and spreading one's reputation. Prestige discredits prestige: prestige and credibility.

all prestige and credibility are lost. Metaphor prestige and credibility completely lost.

silent and odorless: smell. No sound, no smell.

metaphor has no reputation and is not known. The snail's horn: the snail's horn, the metaphor is subtle.

a small but useless reputation. Snail name: a tiny reputation like snail's horn.

small profits in name only. Also known as "snail flies" and "snail flies".

silence, no sound, no breath. Metaphor has no reputation and is not known.

worth a hundred times: refers to social status. Refers to a sudden increase in reputation.

infamous reputation: reputation; Messy: messy. The reputation is ruined to the extreme.

Dishonor and ruin: status, status; Defeat: destroy; Crack: breakage. Lose one's position and reputation.

refers to doing something bad and being completely defeated. Ten times the sound price: prestige and social status.

It means that reputation has greatly increased. Sven sweeping the floor: refers to culture or literati; Sweep the floor: a metaphor for the complete loss of reputation, credit, status, etc.

refers to culture or literati being disrespected or literati being self-indulgent. The destruction of body and name means that body and reputation are destroyed together.

Good reputation and stable status. Describe life, Shu Tai.

Be famous in body, life and fame. The rise of reputation is a metaphor for the rapid increase of reputation.

obscurity: there is no sound; Smell: Famous. It means to be silent, no one knows how to stand up and make a name for yourself: to make yourself have a considerable position in society; Yang: Spread.

Make yourself based on the society and gain a good reputation. A well-known metaphor is a well-known ambition.

Lulu is unknown: a mediocre look. Describe people as mediocre and have no fame.

everyone knows everything: all, all. All people know that it is a household name: understand; Xiao: Yes.

every household knows that. Describe what people know.

all women and children know that children are children. Women and children all know.

means well known. Floating name, small profits and floating name: a vain reputation; Small profits: meager benefits.

describe fame and fortune as insignificant. False fame: a false reputation.

virtual benefits: empty benefits. Describe fame and fortune as an empty thing.

notoriety: reputation; Yang: Communication. Bad reputation spreads far and wide.

everyone knows the bad reputation. Unknown: refers to classic works.

it is not recorded in the scriptures. The latter refers to having no fame or origin. 5. What are the idioms that describe the bad reputation in old age?

1. To be disrespectful to the old: [wé i l ǐ o b ǐ z ū n]

Definition: As an old man, I don't know how to respect myself

2. To rely on the old to sell the old: [y ǐ l ǐ o m à i l ǐ o]

Definition: selling: showing off. Take advantage of your age and put on your old credentials.

3. The evening festival is not guaranteed: [w m: n jié b ù b m: o]

Definition: the evening festival refers to the moral integrity in later years. I have reached my old age but failed to keep my moral integrity. It also means that things fail when they are almost successful.

4. The evening festival does not end: [w m: njié b ù zh ō ng]

Definition: the evening festival refers to the moral integrity in later years. Refers to old age but can't keep moral integrity.

5. Leave a lasting legacy: [yí chòu wàn nián]

Interpretation: Leave a legacy: a bad name left after death. After death, the notoriety has been circulated and will always be reviled.