one keeps his pearl in the bosom and the country goes to ruin
Huaibao mibang, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Hu á IB ǎ om í B ā ng, which means having talent and virtue but not coming out to serve the country. It comes from the Analects of Confucius Yang Huo.
Idiom usage
The old man often hears the scholar say: "when you are young, you will learn, when you are strong, you will walk." (pipa, the fourth)
Analysis of Idioms
Loyalty to the country
The origin of Idioms
In the Analects of Confucius, Yang Huo: "is it benevolent to cherish its treasure and be fascinated by its country?"
Chinese PinYin : huái bǎo mí bāng
one keeps his pearl in the bosom and the country goes to ruin
no one dare do anything about sb. mò gǎn shuí hé
Riding an ox to read the book of Han Dynasty. qí niú dú hàn shū
The fog is surging and the clouds are steaming. wù yǒng yún zhēng