This sentence was said by Herodotus, an ancient Greek historian. His initial view is that if God wants to make a person suffer, he will always get carried away. Ancient Greek tragic writers were all influenced by Herodotus and fully explained it.
2. Oedipus, an ancient Greek tragic writer, famously said, "If God wants to destroy it, he must first make it crazy." There is also a saying in Shakespeare's Macbeth that "if God wants to die, he must play the fool".
3. "If the sky wants to die, it will make it crazy" comes from.
References:
1, Herodotus (Greek: η ο ο σ), an ancient Greek writer and historian in the 5th century BC (about 480 BC-425 BC), recorded what he saw and heard in his travels and the history of the first Persian Empire, and wrote down the history (? στορ? α ι) became the first prose work in the history of western literature, and Herodotus was honored as the "father of history" for this reason.
2. Herodotus' Personal Works:
History of Greek-Persian War
This work was first published in 200 BC.
About 430 years ago, it was not divided into volumes. Later, the proofreader of Alexandria divided it into nine volumes, each with an obvious theme, and named each volume after nine muses in Greek mythology (the goddess in charge of various arts).
References:
Herodotus-Baidu encyclopedia