Filial piety
Confucian virtue
(Redirected from Doting)
Filial piety or parental respect is considered a virtue in many cultures.
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Quotes
edit- The most sacred duty is filial piety. “God showers his blessings on him who honors and reveres the author of his days,” says Pampelus (De Parentibus, Orelli, op. Cit., ii, 345). Ingratitude towards one’s parents is the blackest of all crimes, writes Perictione ( ibid.,p. 350), who is supposed to have been the mother of Plato.
- Annie Besant, The Ancient Wisdom, p. 21 (1897)
- A daughter who respects you while you’re alive is far better than a son who performs the rites and rituals after you’re gone.
- Sanu Sharma, Daughter
- Before becoming someone’s wife, I need to be a daughter first. I owe it to the one who gave me birth and life.
- Sanu Sharma, Daughter
- The king ...
like the vulgar, thinks, feels, acts, and lives
Just as his father did; the unconquered powers
Of precedent and custom interpose
Between a king and virtue.- Percy Bysshe Shelley, The Fairy in Queen Mab (1813), Canto III, lines 97-100