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四字老子 四字老子 天下第一成功学-- 老 子 圣 经 阿 鑫 著 导读:1。老子是天下第一成功学,你读老子是为了你该得到的最大成功;2。老子前后意思一致,绝对没有自相矛盾的地方;3。老子不但放之四海而皆准,而且八十一章每一句都适合每一件事;4。老子不但每一句都适合每一件事,而且适合你的每一秒钟!5。你还能一口气把她读完哦! 四字老子全文 1道若可道,则非常道;名若可名,则非常名。天地之始,其名曰无;万物之母,其名曰有。无物无我,以感其妙。有物有我,以应其激。有无两者,同出异名。同谓之玄,众妙之门。2天下皆知,美之为美,斯识恶矣;善之为善,斯不善矣。有无相生,难易相乘;长短相形,高下相倾。音声相和,对错相替,前后相随,永恒天道。圣人所作,无为之事;圣人所行,不言之教。天下万物,作而弗始。生而弗有,为而不持,功成不居。夫唯不居,是以不去。3君不尚贤,使民不争;奇货不贵,民不为盗;不见可欲,使心不乱。圣人之治,空净其心,实其元气,弱其私志,强其筋骨。恒使人民,无知无欲。应天而行,机动觉随,浑然天成。使夫知者,不敢为也。民为无为,则无不治。4道空道虚,用之不盈。渊兮深兮,万物之宗。挫其锐锋,解其纷扰,和其光色,同其物事。深沉精湛,若亡若存。是谁之子,象帝之先!5天地不仁,刍狗万物?圣人不仁,刍狗百姓?百姓不仁,刍狗运气?天地之间,犹橐龠乎。虚而不屈,动而愈出。多言数穷,不如守中。6谷神不死,是谓玄牝。玄牝之门,是谓天根。绵绵不绝,用之不竭。无穷无尽,永久长存。7天长地久,何能长久?因不自生,故能长生。是以圣人,后身反先;弃身反存;无私成私。8上善若水,周流四方,善利万物,为而不争。处众所恶,故几于道。至善之人,常居善地。心如善渊。与人仁善,所言诚信。朝政善治,做事善能,应时而动。夫唯不争,是故无忧。9持而盈之,不如其已;揣而锐之,不可长保。金玉满堂,莫之能守。富贵而骄,自遗其咎。心随机动,事过心移,功成身退,天之道也。10魂魄合一,能无离乎?专气致柔,如婴儿乎?涤除玄鉴,能无疵乎?爱民治国,能无为乎?天门开合,能为雌乎?明白四达,能无知乎?生而不有,为而不持,长而不宰,是谓玄德。11三十辐条,共接一毂。中留空隙,有车之用。揉合粘土,烧制陶器。器中为无,有器之用。凿户开窗,以成居室。有空有间,居室之用。有以为利,无以为用。有为为利,无为为用。12光色混乱,令人目盲。音声不和,令人耳聋。味道不合,令人口麻。疯驰狂猎,令人发狂。难得之货,令人行防。是以圣人,所为极当。不偏不倚,不过不欠。抨虚务实。去彼取此。13得宠若惊,受辱若惊,珍贵患难,如惜己身。宠辱若惊?得宠为下,得之惊喜,失之心惊。大患若身!为吾有身。及吾无身,吾有何患?贵身为国,可寄天下。全心为国,可托天下。14视之不见,其名曰夷。听之不闻,其名曰希。抟之不得,其名曰微。合而为一,不可致诘。其上不徼,其下不昧。纷芸难名,复归无物。无状之状,无物之象,是谓惚恍。迎不见首,随不见后。执古之道,御今之有,是谓道纪。15善为道者,微妙玄通,深不可识。唯不可释,强为之容:豫若涉川;犹如畏邻;俨若为客;涣若冰释。敦厚朴实,旷若山谷,浑浊若混。孰能浊中,静之徐清?孰能安久,动之徐生?保此道者,不欲满盈。夫唯不盈,蔽而新成。16心致虚极,神守静笃,万物并作,吾能观复。夫物芸芸,各复归根。归根曰静,静曰复命。复命曰常,知常曰明。人不知常,妄作则凶。
茶花女 茶花女 中文 Chapter 1IT is my considered view that no one can invent fictional characters without first having made a lengthy study of people, just as it is impossible for anyone to speak a language that has not been properly mastered. Since I am not yet of an age to invent, I must make do with telling a tale. I therefore invite the reader to believe that this story is true. All the characters who appear in it, with the exception of the heroine, are still living. I would further add that there are reliable witnesses in Paris for most of the particulars which I bring together here, and they could vouch for their accuracy should my word not be enough. By a singular turn of events, I alone was able to write them down since I alone was privy to the very last details without which it would have been quite impossible to piece together a full and satisfying account. It was in this way that these particulars came to my knowledge. On the 12th day of March 1847, in the rue Laffitte, I happened upon a large yellow notice announcing a sale of furniture and valuable curios. An estate was to be disposed of, the owner having died. The notice did not name the dead person, but the sale was to be held at 9 rue d'Antin on the 16th, between noon and five o'clock. The notice also stated that the apartments and contents could be viewed on the 13th and 14th. I have always been interested in curios. I promised myself I would not miss this opportunity, if not of actually buying, then at least of looking. The following day, I directed my steps towards 9 rue d'Antin. It was early, and yet a good crowd of visitors had already gathered in the apartment — men for the most part, but also a number of ladies who, though dressed in velvet and wearing Indian shawls, and all with their own elegant broughams standing at the door, were examining the riches set out before them with astonished, even admiring eyes. After a while, I quite saw the reason for their admiration and astonishment, for having begun myself to look around I had no difficulty in recognizing that I was in the apartment of a kept woman. Now if there is one thing that ladies of fashion desire to see above all else — and there were society ladies present — it is the rooms occupied by those women who have carriages which spatter their own with mud every day of the week, who have their boxes at the Opera or the Theatre-Italien just as they do, and indeed next to theirs, and who display for all Paris to see the insolent opulence of their beauty, diamonds and shameless conduct. The woman in whose apartments I now found myself was dead: the most virtuous of ladies were thus able to go everywhere, even into the bedroom. Death had purified the air of this glittering den of iniquity, and in any case they could always say, if they needed the excuse, that they had done no more than come to a sale without knowing whose rooms these were. I had read the notices, they had wanted to view what the notices advertised and mark out their selections in advance. It could not have been simpler — though this did not prevent them from looking through these splendid things for traces of the secret life of a courtesan of which they had doubtless been given very strange accounts.
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