In Hagi, a white-walled medieval castle town in Japan’s western prefecture of Yamaguchi, stands a little bronze statue. It depicts Motonari Mori, a feudal lord, telling his three sons the parable of the three arrows. Just as a single arrow was easy to snap, but three arrows together could not be easily bent, so too, he explained, sticking together was better than feuding.
在日本西部山口縣(Yamaguchi)白色粉墻的中世紀(jì)城堡小城萩市(Hagi),有一座小小的銅像。其主人是封建領(lǐng)主毛利元就(Motonari Mori),他曾給自己的三個(gè)兒子講“三矢之訓(xùn)”這個(gè)寓言。他解釋說,三兄弟若不團(tuán)結(jié)一致,就會像一支一支的箭那樣容易被折斷;但若是三支箭合在一起,就不那么容易被折斷了。
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