The heart of the bandit
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is f ě ISH í zh ī x ī n, which means the metaphor of perseverance. It comes from the book of songs, Yingfeng, Baizhou.
The origin of Idioms
"The book of songs · Yingfeng · Baizhou": "my heart is a bandit, and I can't turn it."
Idiom usage
Wang Dingbao's "Tang Zhiyan · Zhu Si frustrated" in the Five Dynasties: "Sui Jiang ~, Ji shenzaojing."
Idiom story
In the spring and Autumn period, Wei Shizi and his wife were very affectionate, and they once vowed that their love would not change until death. Later Gong Bo died, and his parents wanted his wife Gong Jiang to remarry. Jiang Jian refused to agree, so he wrote a poem "Bai Zhou" to prove their love and let his parents give up the idea
Analysis of Idioms
The oath of Bo Zhou
Chinese PinYin : fěi shí zhī xīn
The heart of the bandit
There is a gap between the two. tóu jiān dǐ xì
Cooked rice with raw rice. shēng mǐ zuò chéng shú fàn