When the book is used, I hate it less. It's not difficult. Let's talk about it later.
Interpretation: "books are used, hate less, and things are difficult, except calendars." Proverbs, books: knowledge. Arrival: Wait. Use: needed and useful. Time: time. Fang: Cai. Hate: regret, regret. I regret that I read too few books when I actually used them, and I didn't personally experience the difficulties of being ignorant.
Source: Chapter 41 of the Biography of Jigong in the Qing Dynasty: "I talked a few words of gossip and asked some poems. Li answered like a stream, and Zhao Haiming was very happy. Buddhist nun studied ink and asked Li to write a couplet. After reading it, he said,' If you use books, you hate them less, and things are difficult unless you pass them.' "
The stroke order of each word observed in calligraphy
Extended data:
A poem with similar meaning: I finally feel shallow when I get the paper, and I never know what I want to do.
From the Southern Song Dynasty poet Lu You's Reading on a Winter Night, the original text:
The ancients learned nothing, and it takes time to grow old.
What you get on paper is so shallow that you never know what you have to do.
Translation:
The ancients spared no effort to learn knowledge and struggled for it all their lives. They often began to work hard when they were young and achieved something when they were old. After all, the knowledge gained from books is superficial and it is impossible to understand the true meaning of knowledge. To truly understand the profound truth in books, you must practice it yourself in order to learn successfully.