Recommend some ancient poems that satirize stingy people.

1, "Drunk and peaceful, laughing and greedy for small profits"-anonymous in Yuan Dynasty

Grab the mouth of Mud Swallow, sharpen the iron needle, scrape the face of Golden Buddha and search carefully: out of thin air. Looking for peas in quail, cutting lean meat on crane legs, licking fat and oil on mosquito's abdomen. Thanks to the old man!

Grab mud from the swallow's mouth, cut iron chips from the needle, and scrape gold from the bodhisattva's face: out of thin air. Find peas from the throat pouch of quail, chop some lean meat from the leg of crane, and extract fat and oil from the stomach of mosquito. It's a pity that your old gentleman can do it.

2. "Wu Ye satirized the greedy Han people"-the Yuan Dynasty was anonymous.

A rice needle is worn and eaten, and a penny is cut and filled. See children like mud swallows, love money like blood flies. Hide gold and silver and make cakes to satisfy hunger.

Eat a grain of rice with a needle and cut a penny into flowers. Everything you say and do is unreasonable. Treat children like swallows in the mud, work hard, treat money like bloodthirsty flies, and never let go. I saved money day and night, and finally I painted cakes to satisfy my hunger.

3, "Heart and soul of Mencius"-Mencius in the Warring States Period

Andy took it for me and pulled out a dime to benefit the world, not for nothing.

Yang Zhu advocates sacrificing a little interest for himself, even if it is beneficial to the whole world, it is not easy.

4. The Analects of Confucius-Confucius disciples in the Spring and Autumn Period

An upright man is open and poised while a petty man is anxious and worried.

A gentleman is open-minded and calm. The villain is haggle over every ounce, be swayed by considerations of gain and loss.

5. "Poems on official banquets"-Xiao Taoist in Qing Dynasty

The master's knife is sharp, and the mistress's hand is light and loose. A piece of paper, light and unparalleled. Suddenly there was a breeze under the window, floating into the sky, and people hurried to look for it, which had passed the twelve peaks of Wushan.

The rich family hired a teacher for their son to make his studies progress day by day, but the couple were very stingy. Three meals a day were the same: a plate of sliced meat, thin and few. Mr. Wang wrote a satirical poem: the knife is sharp, the hand is light, the meat is cut as thin as paper, and the meat floats outside when the breeze blows gently. When looking for its trace, the meat has drifted over the twelve peaks of Wushan.