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Rope sawing wood broken water drops stone wear (original Tibetan head poem)

author:Chen Zhengui
Rope sawing wood broken water drops stone wear (original Tibetan head poem)

Professor Chen Zhengui has published 100 books, including 10 university textbooks and two national planning textbooks. He has published more than 1,000 poems

Idioms and Tibetan poems: rope sawing wood broken water drops stone wear

Author: Professor Chen Zhengui

〈Rope〉 tends to greet each other with a smile,

〈saw〉 tooth hook claw superior soldier.

The people are strong and thick,

Choose a good neighbor family.

Lu Yan Zhu Ren commented,

"Water" is full of gold for love.

"Stone" is a wonderful music,

〈Wear〉 wall to draw light for a sound.

Note: "The rope saws the wood and the water drops the stone wears" is from the Eastern Han Dynasty Bangu's "Hanshu Meicheng Biography": "Mount Tai's slipping through the stone, the unipolar unity is broken." The drill of water is not stone, and the saw of Sophi wood is gradually becoming so. Translated: "The dripping water of Mount Tai can drip through the rocks, and the thin well rope can grind the railing of the well." Water is not a drill to drill holes in stones, and a well rope is not a saw to pull apart the wood, but it is the constant friction that makes them like this. See also "Crane Forest Yulu One Money Chopping Officials". "Wire sawing" means that using a rope as a saw can also cut wood. The power of metaphor is small, but as long as you stick to it, things can be successful. "Water droplets wear stones" refers to water droplets that are constantly dripping and can drip through stones; It is a metaphor for perseverance, and the collection of small forces can also achieve rare achievements.

This idiom illustrates that as long as there is perseverance, perseverance, and unremitting efforts, one day you will succeed. Although the power is subtle, it is a long-term work, and the most important thing is perseverance, and the work will be achieved naturally.

April 20, 2024 in Shenzhen

Rope sawing wood broken water drops stone wear (original Tibetan head poem)
Rope sawing wood broken water drops stone wear (original Tibetan head poem)
Rope sawing wood broken water drops stone wear (original Tibetan head poem)