The most bitter and joyful is an argumentative essay written by Liang Qichao, which comes from the Complete Works of Liang Qichao and is selected into the new Chinese textbook of People's Education Press, version 20 16, the second volume of grade seven, lesson 15.
This paper talks about the responsibility of life from two aspects: the most bitter and the most joyful, and tells a truth: in life, we must do our due duty to our family, society, country and ourselves, so that we can get real happiness.
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The most bitter and joyful is profound in thought and elegant in style. It has both the enterprising spirit of Confucianism and the extraordinary wisdom of Buddhism. As we all know, it is refreshing to read. It talks about the responsibility of life from two aspects: the most bitter and the most enjoyable.
The most bitter and joyful embodies a far-reaching value orientation. The author's idea of happiness and happiness is "due diligence", which is extraordinary. It is vulgar to regard "promotion and wealth" as happiness; It seems noble to say that "the happiness of others is your own happiness", but it will fall into a circular argument; "Who has never died in life since ancient times, keeping the heart of Dan shines in the history of history (Wen Tianxiang in Song Dynasty)", facing death is noble and heroic, but it is not universal in time and situation.
Who can live forever since ancient times? I want to leave a patriotic heart that reflects history.
The idea of "doing one's duty faithfully" is noble, profound, simple and eternal, and has strong universality. No matter when and where, everyone can do his duty-to his relatives, friends, society and himself.
People's Education Publishing House-A Text Study of "The Most Bitter and the Most Happy"