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The wicked are afraid of the sky, and the good are not afraid of the sky. Who wrote it?

"Evil people are afraid of heaven, evil people are not afraid of heaven, and good people do not bully heaven." This was written by Tao Xi of the Qing Dynasty.

Interpretation: A kind person may be bullied, but kindness will be rewarded, and eventually he will be rewarded. People who do evil will be afraid of ordinary good people, but what goes around comes around will always be settled with him, and what goes around comes around.

This sentence comes from the first episode of augmented sages, and its content is as follows:

Augmented and benign writing-excerpt

Qingzhou Tao Xi

Life is like a bird in the same forest, and it will fly separately.

If you turn yourself into a donkey, don't complain about others riding you.

People are not rich without windfall, and horses are not fat without weeds.

The wicked are afraid of heaven, and the good do not bully it.

Good and evil will eventually be rewarded, just for coming early and coming late.

There is still a day when the Yellow River will be clarified. How can people have no luck?

Interpretation: Life is like a bird living in the same forest. When disaster comes, it will fly away separately. Kind people are often bullied, and docile horses are always ridden at will. People can't get rich without making a windfall, and horses can't get fat without weeds.

The wicked are fearless, and the good people are bullied by heaven but not by it. Whether you do good or bad, you will get what you deserve in the end. The difference is that you come early or late. When the Yellow River is still being clarified, can't people have a transshipment day?

Extended data:

Zhou Zeng revised the children's enlightenment reading "Zengguang Xianwen". During the Tongzhi period of the Qing Dynasty, the year of birth and death was ominous. In the preface, he said that he was an old pedant and a teacher. ?

Enhanced wisdom. It is called Xianwen in ancient times and Xianwen in ancient and modern times. It is an enlightenment bibliography for Taoist children compiled in the Ming Dynasty in China. The title of the book was first seen in the drama Peony Pavilion in the Wanli period of Ming Dynasty, so it can be inferred that this book was written in the Wanli period at the latest.

"Glory and Contribution" is a collection of proverbs and aphorisms of China from ancient times to the present. Later, it was changed to this appearance after the continuous supplement of the literati in the Ming and Qing Dynasties. It was called "adding glory to the text" in history, commonly known as "adding glory to the text".

I haven't seen any books, except that it was revised by Confucian scholars during Tongzhi period in Qing Dynasty, which is probably the crystallization of folk creation.