Go through fire and water
Going through fire and water is an idiom, which is basically interpreted as a metaphor for avoiding difficulties and dangers. The same as "going through fire and water".
The same as "going through fire and water". According to the biography of Lingying written by sun Kui of Tang Dynasty, "a gentleman's ambition is to kill his body in order to become benevolent, to die for his perseverance, to go through fire and water, and to face injustice." the only way to repay a dog or a horse is to see what he can do. Wang Tao, Qing Dynasty, used it as predicate, object and attribute.
Chinese PinYin : dǎo fù tāng huǒ
Go through fire and water
the west wind and fallen leaves -- an autumn scene. xī fēng luò yè
wage a life-and-death struggle. jué yī sǐ zhàn