A mountain needn’t be high, it is famous so long as there is a deity on it.
A lake needn’t be deep, it has supernatural power so long as there is a dragon in it.
My home is humble, but it enjoys the fame of virtue so long as I am living in it.
The moss creeping onto the doorsteps turns them green.
The color of the grass reflected through the bamboo curtains turns the room blue.
Erudite scholars come in good spirits to talk with me, and among my guests there is no unlearned common man.
In this humble house, I can enjoy playing my plainly decorated qin, or read the Buddhist Scriptures quietly.
Without the disturbance of the noisy that jar on the ears, or the solemn burden of reading official documents.
My humble home is like the thatched hut of Zhu Ge Liang of Nanyang, or the Pavilion Ziyun of Xishu.
Confucius once said: ‘How could we call a home humble as long as there is a virtuous man in it?’