Explanation of the bitter taste of good medicine Good medicine often tastes bitter. Metaphor: loyal words are offensive to the ears. "Han Feizi·Wai Chu Shuo Upper Left": "A good medicine tastes bitter in the mouth, but a wise man advises him to drink it, knowing that it will cure his illness; loyal words are brushed in his ears, and the wise master listens to it, knowing that it can bring about success." Han Feizi. Liu Xiang's "Shuoyuan Zhengjian": "Confucius said: 'Good medicine is bitter to the mouth and is good for the disease; loyal words that are irritating to the ears are good for action.'" Ming Liu Ji's "Kuzhai Ji": "Good medicine is bitter for the mouth and is good for the disease; honest words that are irritating to the ears are good for action." The pain is my pleasure, and the pleasure of the other is my pain." The words explain the medicine that can cure the disease. It is often used to describe the difficulty in finding good medicines to cure all diseases in the world. Detailed explanation of medicines with high efficacy. "Chu Ci·Tian Wen": "If you get good medicine, you can't stick to it." Han Wangchong's "Lunheng·Daoxu": "Taking good medicine will restore the body's qi. If it is not the original qi, the body will be less heavy, but the medicine will be the qi." The explanation for the long body and light taste: repeatedly and sincerely say bitter words to persuade: the bitter taste of good medicine is good for the disease. The bitter taste is good for the disease. "Historical Records of the Liuhou Family": "True advice is unpleasant to the ears and good for action, and poisonous medicine is bitter for the disease."
"Yuan Zhen of the Tang Dynasty "Thanks for the gift of gold and stone Ling Hongxue Shape to the Prime Minister Linghu": "I have the foolishness of Danchi, so I gave it to you