A long journey
Dinghu Longqu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ǐ NGH ú L ó ngq ù, which means the death of the emperor. From Lishan.
The origin of Idioms
Du Fu's poem "Lishan" in Tang Dynasty: "the Great Lakes and Dragons go far, the silver seas and geese fly deep."
Idiom usage
The Great Lakes and dragons are gone forever, only the wild geese and ducks are flying. The Yellow Emperor collected Shoushan copper and cast the tripod at the foot of Jingshan mountain. When the tripod is completed, a dragon hangs its beard to welcome the Yellow Emperor. On the Yellow Emperor's horseback, there were more than 70 officials from the upper palace, and the Dragon went up. Yu Xiaochen can't go up, but he knows how to hold the dragon's beard, pull it out, fall it, and fall the bow of the Yellow Emperor. When people look up to the Yellow Emperor, they hold his bow and beard, so later generations call it Dinghu and his bow Wu. According to the historical records of Xiaowu, the Yellow Emperor collected Shoushan copper and cast the tripod at the foot of Jingshan mountain. When the tripod is completed, a dragon hangs its beard to welcome the Yellow Emperor. On the Yellow Emperor's horseback, there were more than 70 officials from the Imperial Palace, and the Dragon went up. Yu Xiaochen can't go up, but he knows that he holds the dragon's beard, pulls it out, and falls into the bow of the Yellow Emperor.
Chinese PinYin : dǐng hú lóng qù
A long journey
fearful with a guilty conscience. huái zhe guǐ tāi
humble followers waiting for a pull from their superior. huái nán jī quǎn
No one came down but the stairs. zhǐ tīng lóu tī xiǎng,bù jiàn rén xià lái