"Thinking about benefits and others" means that one always wants to strive for benefits for himself. However, the acquisition of benefits is conditional. When a person brings benefits to others, he can only get benefits himself.
The Book for Seats, also known as the Book on Seats and the Book of Shooting with Guo Servants, is an excellent cursive script written by Yan Zhenqing. In the second year of Tang Guangde (AD 764), Yan Zhenqing wrote a letter manuscript to Guo Yingyi, the king of Xiang. There are seven papers and about 64 lines of ancient poems in cursive script. [1]
Competing for Seats Post, Yan's Manuscripts for My Nephew and Uncle are collectively called "Yan Shu San Manuscripts". Together with Wang Xizhi's Preface to the Lanting Pavilion, it is also called "a pair of running books". This manuscript is full of letters and strokes, vigorous and quaint, and is treasured by the world.
The original trace of "Competing for Seats" has been lost, and the carved stone is stored in the forest of steles in Xi 'an. In the Northern Song Dynasty, Anshiwen in Chang 'an carved stones with original works (this edition is called "Xi 'an edition"). Because of the exquisite imitation and the loss of the original works, all the good people took this edition as the basis, and there were as many as 12 kinds of engravings handed down from generation to generation, so it was the most important among the handed down books. Today, the rubbings in the Northern Song Dynasty have not been passed down, and the rubbings in the Southern Song Dynasty are as rare as the stars. Among them, the Northern Song Dynasty rubbings in the National Library, the Palace Museum in Beijing and the Southern Song Dynasty rubbings in the Shanghai Library are famous.