The wicked are afraid of heaven, and the good are not afraid of heaven. Who wrote it?

"The wicked are afraid of heaven, and the good are not bullying the sky" was written by Qing Zhou Xitao.

definition: people who are kind may be bullied, but good will be rewarded, and eventually he will be rewarded. People who are evil will be afraid of ordinary good people, but what goes around comes around will always settle his evil with him, and evil will surely be rewarded.

This sentence is from the first episode of Augmented Xianwen, which reads as follows:

Augmented Xianwen-Excerpt

Qing Zhou Xitao

Life is like birds living in the same forest, and when the time comes, they will fly separately.

people are good at being bullied, while horses are good at being ridden.

people are not rich without windfall, and horses are not fat without weeds.

evil people are afraid of heaven, while good people do not bully heaven.

good and evil will be rewarded in the end, and only come early and come late.

The Yellow River still has a clearing day, so how can people have no luck?

Interpretation: Life is like a bird that lives in the same forest. When disaster strikes, it will fly away separately. Kind people are often bullied by others, and tame horses are always ridden at will. People can't get rich without making a windfall, and horses are not fat without weeds.

The wicked people are afraid but not afraid of heaven, and the kind people are bullied but not bullied by heaven. Whether you do good or evil, you will get what you deserve in the end. The difference is that you come earlier or later. When the Yellow River is still clarified, can't people have the day when their fortunes turn?

Extended information:

Zhou Xitao once revised the children's enlightenment book Zengguang Xianwen. During the Tongzhi period in the Qing Dynasty, he was born and died in an ominous year. In the preface, he said that he was an old pedant and a scholar. ?

augmented wisdom. Also known as Xianwen in the Past and Xianwen in the Ancient and Modern Times, it is an enlightenment bibliography for Taoist children compiled by China in the Ming Dynasty. The title of the book was first seen in the drama Peony Pavilion in the Wanli period of the Ming Dynasty, so it can be inferred that this book was written in the Wanli period at the latest.

Augmented Sages is a collection of China's proverbs and maxims from ancient times to the present. Later, after the continuous supplement of the Ming and Qing literati, it was changed to this appearance, which was called "Zengguang Xianwen in the Past" and was commonly called "Zengguang Xianwen".

The author has never seen any books, except that Zhou Xitao, a Confucian scholar, had revised them during Tongzhi period in Qing Dynasty, which was probably the result of folk creation.