A poem with rigorous description.

The ancients didn't know how to learn, but they didn't know how to do it until they were young.

For the sake of humanity, you can't help but say it, and you can't help saying it. You can see the sages and Si Qi, but if you don't, you can also reflect on yourself. You are strict with yourself.

Make up for your shortcomings with your own strengths.

Be a man of good faith.

Horses should be fast and people should be steady.

You can't be right if you can't be right.

It's better to admit your mistake than to lie.

Compassion is the foundation and convenience is the door.

Don't spend money recklessly, and don't brag about your own advantages.

The sky will not flatter itself, but the earth will not flatter itself.

A full pot is silent, and a half pot jingles.

Mountains and Gao Quan are clear, trees are tall, and roots must be deep.

Knowing is knowing, and not knowing is not knowing.

It is better to be ungrateful to me than to be ungrateful to me.

Good words are not as good as good deeds, and good beginning and good ending are better.

Once a good thing is done to the end, a bad thing is not done once.

It's raining and the ground is slipping. If you fall, you will get up.

The sea doesn't laugh at water drops, and the mountains don't laugh at pebbles.

Shake your head at the horse race, and the hero will fall proudly.

Open-minded, eager to learn is praised, and pretentious is hated.

Sages don't try to be brave, and gentlemen don't accept the kindness of others.

Pretentiousness is annoying, but modesty can increase wisdom.

Modest people often think about themselves, and proud people often say that people are short.