Idioms of filial piety
Later, this idiom was used as a metaphor for filial piety.
2. The story of finding carp by lying on the ice originated from Gan Bao's Searching for the Gods (volume 1 1), which tells the story of Wang Xiang, a Linyi native of Jin Dynasty, fishing for his stepmother in winter, and is regarded as a classic story of filial piety by later generations. This is also the case in the Book of Jin edited by Fang and others, and it is also the case in the Twenty-four Filial Pieties of the Yuan Dynasty by Guo.
3, a grass and a tree means that the grass's meager mind can't return the affection of the spring sunshine, which means that the kindness of parents is heavy and difficult to return. The word comes from Meng Jiao's Ode to a Wanderer in the Tang Dynasty: Only an inch of grass is a little sentimental, and whoever wins three spring rays.
Kindness is an idiom, which means that children repay their parents for their kindness. Yuan Ming's "Snow Treasure Acknowledges Mother" is the second fold: As the saying goes, a horse has a reins, a dog has the grass, trampling on the street, and kindness feeds back.
5. Being filial, filial and filial means being filial to your parents when you go home and loving your brother when you go out. This word comes from the Analects of Confucius: Confucius said:? Disciples are filial when they enter, and filial when they leave. ?