do one 's best till one 's heart ceases to beat
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin, is B ì é RH ò uy ǐ, which means to work hard or strive for a certain purpose for a lifetime, until death. It comes from the book of rites, the book of rites, written by Dai Sheng in the Western Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of rites, the Western Han Dynasty, Dai Sheng said, "when you walk along the country road, you give up when you are in the middle of the road. When you forget your old age, you don't know how many years you are short of. When you die, you will be killed."
Idiom usage
Tian Rucheng's biography of a Ji in Ming Dynasty: how can you forget your personal affairs!
Chinese PinYin : bì ér hòu yǐ
do one 's best till one 's heart ceases to beat
change one's sorrow into joy. zhuǎn bēi wéi xǐ