"The old ox knows that it doesn't need a whip at dusk" has become a widely quoted famous sentence and is often mistaken for the hand of the ancients.
Second, the original text is attached:
Hard-working cattle
Cang Kejia
Pieces of waste water and sludge, deep ploughing takes things away.
The old ox can also solve the problem of being young and expensive, but he can't wait to slap himself.
Three. About the author:
Cang Kejia (1905.10.8-February 5, 2004) [1] was born in Zhucheng, Weifang, Shandong. His original name is Zang, and his pen names are Shao Quan and He Jia. He is a well-known alumnus of Shandong University. He is a student of Wen Yiduo and a modern poet. Loyal patriot, once a member of China Democratic League, a deputy to the second and third National People's Congress, a member of the fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth CPPCC, a member of the seventh and eighth Standing Committee, the first and second directors of the Chinese Writers Association, the third director and consultant, the fourth consultant, the fifth and sixth honorary vice-chairman and the third and fourth members of the China Federation of Literary and Art Circles.
He used to be the editor-in-chief of Poetry magazine. His first book of poetry was Brand, mainly satirical poetry collection Baby and literary prose collection On the Road to Literature Study. His short poem "Some People" was well received and was selected as the twentieth lesson of the sixth-grade people's education edition. Mr. Wen Yiduo's "Speaking and Doing" was selected as the twelfth lesson of the Seventh Grade People's Education Publishing House.