Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - What does compassion mean?

What does compassion mean?

I know why, but I feel pity. It means: I know I can't do it, but I have to do it. Show determination. Sometimes it also means stubbornness.

Compassion is a Chinese word, pronounced as cè yǐn, which means to show sympathy for people who are suffering, but can't bear it. This word is recorded in Mencius Gongsun Chou and Tian Jia Yi Shi.

1, sympathy, pity.

① "On the Ugliness of Mencius": "At first sight, today's people are full of compassion."

(2) The poem "Tian Jia Is Things" written by Chu Guangxi in Tang Dynasty: "My heart is full of pity, and I care about these two sorrows."

(3) The Ancient and Modern Novel Pei Jin's Righteousness Return to the Original Match: "Every time Pei Jin was sympathetic, he was very willing to deal with people in trouble."

(4) Ming Feng Menglong's "Warning to the World. Volume 21. Zhao Taizu sent Jingniang a thousand miles away": I met you by chance, and I was saved by birth, and I really showed compassion, not greedy for beauty.

⑤ "The Demon in Tieshu Town, Jingyang Palace": "It is no pity to let him live and chase him."

⑥ Zhu Ziqing's "On Eating": "Of course, 12% of them are given food out of charity, that is, compassion, but 8% are afraid of them and they are afraid of taking risks."

2. Grief.

Liu Xiang, the Songs of the South: "Wandering around outside, feeling sad inside." Wang Yi's note: "My heart is always full of sorrow and I miss you."