Lu shaojing
Many honest officials in ancient China wrote many beautiful poems about clean government. Wu Nayungui, the supervisor of the Ming Dynasty, returned to Beijing, and the third division of Guizhou sent someone to chase after the gold 100 Liang. Wu Na refused, wrote a poem and refused: "Xiaoxiao's luggage has moved from the east, and it will cross the most dangerous beach in the future. If there is stolen goods, it will sink into the blue waves. " When Kuang Zhong became the magistrate of Suzhou in the Ming Dynasty, he punished corrupt officials. When Ren Man returned to Beijing, he wrote a poem to the people who were crying: "Take care of your bags. How many miles have Beijing seen? Don't whip it again. Remember it as an official day. Everything can be called the alliance of heaven and earth." The Qing Dynasty was politically cautious, honest and self-disciplined for 40 years, and hated corrupt officials. When he was promoted to Yin Zhengguan, a well-known official in Guilin, he personally wrote "Self-encouragement" by the Security Council: "It is not enough to talk about politics, but to rest from the province and be self-denying; When you become an official, you have a big picture and think that everything is related to people's livelihood and the national economy. " Zhang Boxing, the governor of Jiangnan in Qing Dynasty, was very self-disciplined. In order to refuse bribery, he wrote a couplet and posted it on the yamen: "A little, my Lord; A penny is the essence of the people. " In the Qing Dynasty, Wu, the magistrate of Wuxi County, Jiangsu Province, just got off the bus when he took office in Wuxi, and wrote a pair of self-encouragement couplets in the living room: "No mercy, no bribery, swindling and cheating, and strict laws; This is true, this is fair and innocent. "