destroyed wells and walls
The Chinese idiom, B à ij à ngtu í Yu á n in pinyin, means that the house is destroyed and the wall is collapsed; it describes the desolation of the village. It comes from the poem of "the title of Sanyi tower" in the collection outside the collection.
The origin of Idioms
Lu Xun's poem entitled "the tower of three righteousness" in his collection outside the collection: "the son of man was annihilated by the flying thunder, but the well was ruined and the dove was left hungry."
Idiom usage
It refers to a desolate scene. After the earthquake, there were ruins everywhere. Chapter 4 and Chapter 5 of Hua Yue Chen: "the broken temple is desolate, and the grass is a foot deep. I can see a group of sheep eating grass there, decaying walls and wells, and porches and verandahs leaning towards each other."
Chinese PinYin : bài jǐng tuí yuán
destroyed wells and walls
instructions from one 's father. shī tíng zhī xùn
the moon shining on the beams of the house -- thinking of a friend. luò yuè wū liáng
There are three unknowns in this. cǐ zhōng sān mèi
To spread the wind and fan the fire. chuán fēng shān huǒ