out of the depth of misfortune comes bliss
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p ǐ J í t à IL á I, which means that when adversity reaches its peak, it will turn to prosperity. When bad luck comes, good luck comes. From the book of changes No.
The origin of Idioms
"No" in Zhouyi: "no bandits are not good for Junzi Zhen "Xiang said: Heaven and earth do not intersect, No."
Idiom usage
In the book of changes Tai: "Tai, small to big, Jiheng." "Xiang said: Heaven and earth, Thailand." In the spring and Autumn Annals of the Wu and Yue dynasties, the biography of Gou Jian's accession to the throne States, "if the time is too late, the situation will be better." The 26th chapter of Water Margin by Shi Naian of Ming Dynasty: as the saying goes: "happiness brings sorrow, and the best comes." Time is fast, and it is more than 40 days earlier. In the ancient and modern novels, Yang Ba and Lao Yue's wonderful encounter: "when the times are good, heaven teaches him to meet his master and servant." Cui Shipei's "Romance of the West Chamber: the best time under the moon" says: "thanks to your patience and determination, Miss Zhang Sheng, you are in a better situation." Chapter one and three of Cao Xueqin's dream of Red Mansions in Qing Dynasty: my aunt is crazy. When the times are good, honor and disgrace go round and round since ancient times. How can human resources always be protected. Lao She's "four generations in the same hall" May 4th Movement: "is it the best time to turn good luck?"
Chinese PinYin : pǐ jí tài lái
out of the depth of misfortune comes bliss
Change from the old to the new. gé xīn biàn jiù
God knows it, but man. shén ér míng zhī,cún hū qí rén
scoundrels of the marketplace. shì jǐng wú lài
Anger comes from the heart, and evil comes from the gall. nù cóng xīn tóu qǐ,è xiàng dǎn biān shēng
dress in the coarse hempen cloth black. pī má dài suǒ
do a seemingly clever thing which turns out to be a foolish one instead. nòng qiǎo chéng zhuō