Current location - Quotes Website - Famous sayings - Poems related to the Constitution
Poems related to the Constitution

1. The Skynet is vast and sparse but not lost. ——Spring and Autumn Period·Li Er's "Laozi"

Translation: It means that heaven is fair, and those who do evil will be punished. It may seem very careless, but in the end a bad person will not be let go. It is a metaphor that those who do evil will never escape the punishment of heaven.

2. Wealth and wealth are subject to the law, while poverty and lowliness are afraid of being punished by the list. ——"Long Song Xing" by Mei Yaochen of the Song Dynasty

Translation: Wealth should not be bound by the law, and poor and humble people do not need to fear the law.

3. Only by adhering to the law of three feet can we rope people from all over the world. ——Wu Jing of the Tang Dynasty, "Zhenguan Politicians"

Translation: Only by adhering to strict laws can the world be governed. The law of three feet is the law. Before the emergence of paper, the ancients used bamboo slips as the main carrier of written records, and the bamboo slips that recorded different contents were strictly defined. Laws were generally written on bamboo slips that were three feet long, so later generations used the three-foot rule as the law. Law is another name for law.

4. My career is immeasurable, but I can only use the law to restrain myself. ——"Send to Lu Tong" by Han Yu of the Tang Dynasty

Translation: Mr.'s career is immeasurable and can only be restrained by the law.

5. Forgiveness is never too big, punishment is never too small. ——Fu Sheng of the Western Han Dynasty, "Shang Shu·Dayu Mo"

Translation: Forgiveness, forgiveness; fault, fault; the general meaning of these two sentences is that a temporary fault, no matter how big it is, can be forgiven, and a knowing mistake can be forgiven, no matter how small it is. To punish.