2. The ideal of life is for the ideal life.
Books don't tell people their uses. The wisdom of using books is not in the book, but outside the book, relying on observation.
4. Reading makes people perfect.
Sincere friendship is like health, you don't know its value until you lose it.
6. No medicine can communicate with the soul except true friends. For a sincere friend, you can convey your worries, joys, fears, hopes, doubts, advice and anything that weighs on your heart.
7. The light a person gets from another person's lies is cleaner and purer than the light he gets from his own understanding and judgment. ...
8. The best preventive medicine to keep people healthy is the advice and suggestions of friends.
9.doubt is the poison of friendship.
10. One of the main functions of friendship is to let people vent their anger and frustration.
1 1. People who make friends temporarily are not friends.
12. People who can't get friendship are poor loners all their lives. A society without friendship is just a bustling desert.
13. If you tell your happiness to a friend, you will get two happiness. If you tell your sadness to a friend, you will be divided into half sadness.
Nature is like a seed, which can grow into both fragrant flowers and poisonous weeds, so people should always check it to cultivate the former and pull out the latter.
14. Friendship doubles happiness and halves pain.
15. Reading is enough to make people happy, colorful and talented.
16. Reading makes people perfect. Bacon (UK)
17. Books are in the times. Riding the ship of thought, the precious goods are carefully transported to generation after generation. Bacon (UK)
18. Some books just need to be tasted, some books need to be swallowed, and a few books need to be chewed carefully. Bacon (UK)
19. The image of human wisdom and knowledge will remain in the book forever; They can be protected from the wear and tear of time and can be renovated forever. Bacon (UK)
20. Books don't tell people their uses. The wisdom of using books is not in the book, but outside the book, all by observation. Bacon (UK)
2 1. When reading, we talk with wise men; In the affairs of life, we usually talk to fools. Bacon (UK)