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| [1] |
THE MASTER said: “Love makes a spot beautiful:
who chooses not to dwell in love, has he got wisdom?” |
| [2] |
The Master said: “Loveless men
cannot bear need long, they cannot bear fortune long. Loving hearts find peace in love; clever heads find profit in it.” |
| [3] |
The Master said: “Love can alone
love others, or hate others.” |
| [4] |
The Master said: “A heart set
on love will do no wrong.” |
| [5] |
The Master said: “Wealth and honours
are what men desire; but abide not in them by help of wrong. Lowliness and want are hated of men; but forsake them not by
help of wrong. “Shorn of love, is a gentleman worthy the name? Not for one moment may a gentleman sin
against love; not in flurry and haste, nor yet in utter overthrow.” |
| [6] |
The Master said: “A friend to
love, a foe to evil, I have yet to meet. A friend to love will set nothing higher. In love’s service, a foe to evil
will let no evil touch him. Were a man to give himself to love, but for one day, I have seen no one whose strength would fail
him. Such men there may be, but I have not seen one.” |
| [7] |
The Master said: “A man and his
faults are of a piece. By watching his faults we learn whether love be his.” |
| [8] |
The Master said: “To learn the
truth at daybreak and die at eve were enough.” |
| [9] |
The Master said: “A scholar in
search of truth who is ashamed of poor clothes and poor food it is idle talking to.” |
| [10] |
The Master said: “A gentleman
has no likes and no dislikes below heaven. He follows right.” |
| [11] |
The Master said: “Gentlemen cherish
worth; the vulgar cherish dirt. Gentlemen trust in justice; the vulgar trust in favour.” |
| [12] |
The Master said: “The chase of
gain is rich in hate.” |
| [13] |
The Master said: “What is it to
sway a kingdom by courteous yielding? Who cannot by courteous yielding sway a kingdom, what can he know of courtesy?” |
| [14] |
The Master said: “Be not concerned
at want of place; be concerned that thou stand thyself. Sorrow not at being unknown, but seek to be worthy of note.” |
| [15] |
The Master said: “One thread,
Shen, 1 runs through all my teaching.” “Yes,”
said Tseng-tzu. After the Master had left, the disciples asked what was meant. Tseng-tzu said:
“The Master’s teaching all hangs on faithfulness and fellow-feeling.” |
| [16] |
The Master said: “A gentleman
considers what is right; the vulgar consider what will pay.” |
| [17] |
The Master said: “At sight of
worth, think to grow like it. When evil meets thee, search thine own heart.” |
| [18] |
The Master said: “A father or
mother may be gently chidden. If they will not bend, be the more lowly, but persevere; nor murmur if trouble follow.” |
| [19] |
The Master said: “Whilst thy father
and mother live, do not wander afar. If thou must travel, hold a set course.” |
| [20] |
The Master said: “If for three
years a son do not forsake his father’s ways, he may be called dutiful.” |
| [21] |
The Master said: “A father’s
and a mother’s age must be borne in mind; with joy on the one hand, fear on the other.” |
| [22] |
The Master said: “Men of old were
loth to speak; lest a word that they could not make good should shame them.” |
| [23] |
The Master said: “Who contains
himself goes seldom wrong.” |
| [24] |
The Master said: “A gentleman
wishes to be slow to speak and quick to act.” |
| [25] |
The Master said: “Good is no hermit.
It has ever neighbours.” |
| [26] |
Tzu-yu said: “Preaching to princes
brings disgrace, nagging at friends estrangement.” |