Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - Idioms about being grateful and repaying kindness. What are the idioms about being grateful and repaying kindness?

Idioms about being grateful and repaying kindness. What are the idioms about being grateful and repaying kindness?

1. The idiom, knotting a grass ring, expresses gratitude and repays kindness, and will never forget it until death. Story: Jie Cao: After the death of his father, Wei Ke, a doctor of the Jin Dynasty, did not follow his last wish to have his concubine buried, but let her get married. Later, when Wei Ke was fighting Du Hui, an old man tied a knot in the grass and tripped Du Hui. At night, I dreamed that the old man said that he was the father of the woman he was married to, and he came here to repay his kindness. Holding rings: Yang Bao of the Eastern Han Dynasty rescued a yellow bird, and at night a boy in yellow clothes repaid him with four white rings.

2. Idiom, stay away. Retreat ninety miles. It is a metaphor for retreating and avoiding conflicts. Story: During the Spring and Autumn Period, Chong'er, the prince of Jin State, took refuge in Chu State and was favored by the King of Chu. The king of Chu asked what he would repay in the future, and he replied: "Jin and Chu were in charge of the army, and when they encountered the Central Plains, they made three houses for the king." Later, the Jin and Chu armies faced each other, and the Jin kept its promise and retreated ninety miles to repay the past. The virtue of the King of Chu.

3. Idiom: Do your best. Be careful and work to the best of your ability. Story: Zhuge Liang was grateful to Liu Bei for his kindness in knowing him and meeting him three times, and made great contributions to the Kingdom of Shu by strategizing. "Dedicate yourself to the end of your life and then die." He later said in his "Departure List" that assisting the late master Liu Chan was also a way of repaying the kindness of the late master and His Majesty.

4. Proverb: A drop of water shows kindness, and a spring of water should repay it. Verse: I repay you the favor on the golden stage, support the jade dragon and die for you. Li He's "Yanmen Prefect's Journey" In order to repay the king's kindness of worshiping the general on the golden platform, he is willing to carry the sword and die on the battlefield for the king. Verse: I am grateful for my mother's kindness to my son, but I am ashamed that I am not a Han talent (Li Bai). It is said that when Han Xin was in poverty, he received a meal from an old washer woman by the river. Verse: There is no way that your kindness is higher than the sky, and it is your fault to live up to your kindness. Poems of Emperor Jiaqing. A comment that praises the king's kindness to his ministers and vows to repay it even to the death.