SECTION B ENGLISH TO CHINESE Directions: Translate the following text into Chinese. Simplicity is an uprightness of soul that has no reference to self it is different from sincerity, and it is a still higher virtue. We see many people who are sincere, without being simple they only wish to pass for what they are, and they are unwilling to appear what they are not they are always thinking of themselves, measuring their words, and recalling their thoughts, and reviewing their actions, from the fear that they have done too much or too little. These persons are sincere, but they are simple they are not at ease with others, and others are not at ease with them they are not free. ingenuous, natural we prefer people who are less correct, less perfect, and who are less artificial. This is the decision of man, and it is the judgment of God, who would not have us so occupied with ourselves, and thus, as it were, always arranging our features in a mirror. To be wholly occupied with others, never to look within, is the state of blindness of those who are entirely engrossed by what is present and addressed to their senses this is the very reverse of simplicity. To be absorbed in self in whatever engages us, whether we are laboring for our fellow beings or for God-to be wise in our own eyes reserved, and full of ourselves, troubled at the least thing that disturbs our self-complacency, is the opposite extreme. This is false wisdom, which, with all its glory, is but little less absurd than that folly, which pursues only pleasure.