Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - What are the thrifty ancient poems?

What are the thrifty ancient poems?

1, Li Shen (Tang Dynasty)

In spring, as long as you sow a seed, you can harvest a lot of food in autumn.

There is no waste of heaven and earth, and the toiling peasants are still starving to death.

2, "Yong Shi" Li Shangyin (Tang Dynasty)

Looking at the countries and families of former sages, they became thrifty and extravagant.

Why amber is a pillow, and real pearls are cars.

3. Cao Cao's "Duguan Mountain"

The world sighs "Boyi", desires vulgarity but is extravagant, evil and thrifty.

4. Zhao Puchu's "Relieved Ballad"

Less meat and more vegetables, sweet in the rough, sweet in the fine.

If you don't choose old and new clothes, you dare to keep out the cold, and if it breaks down, you will keep out the cold.

More famous motto:

Cao Cao said in "Duguan Mountain": "Abandoning evil is great, and thrift is virtue."

It means that extravagance and waste is the greatest evil and thrift is the greatest virtue. Li Shangyin's Poem History II is like proverbs and epigrams, which directly poke people's hearts and torture their souls: "Looking at the sages of the past, we should be thrifty and extravagant. Why do you need amber as a pillow? It is true that pearls are cars. "

From a big country to a small one, success is all diligence and thrift, and failure is all luxury.

Diligence is like a trickle, nourishing people's hearts, luxury is like a tiger, eating people's bones and muscles.

Bai Juyi has a poem to prove it: "The extravagant is frugal, and the fierce is in front of us."