flashy and wasteful poems
Fengyun Yuelu is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is f ē ngy ú NYU è L ù, which refers to the floating poems and essays. It comes from the biography of Li Er in Sui Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
"The biography of Li Er in the book of Sui Dynasty" says: "it's full of pages, and it's just like the wind and the cloud
Idiom usage
For example, Liu Kezhuang's title Dong Pu Fa Gan Wen Gao in Song Dynasty says, "there must be a supplement to the way of the world, and a virtuous man is far away from the work of Fengyun Yuelu." Zheng Xie of the Qing Dynasty wrote that "the words of wind, cloud and moon, which are contrary to reason and hurt the way, are innumerable, and they are often burning in the hope of the first emperor." Chapter 81 of a dream of Red Mansions: "although you know a few lines of poetry, it's also nonsense; even if it's OK, it's just the wind and the moon, which has nothing to do with the business of your life." Li Ciming of the Qing Dynasty wrote in his book the collection of Tang's literary quintessence in Shuling's tingkan school hall: "when it came to the Six Dynasties, the more brilliant it was, the more brilliant it was. It was ridiculed by the wind and the moon." In the book "ninety eight annals of the history of the Qing Dynasty sixty three music five", it is said that "Xu'er's hairpin and train make great achievements, but the wind, cloud and moon are not successful in the end. He is a true Confucian. Arrow volume ah, zero dew
Chinese PinYin : fēng yún yuè lù
flashy and wasteful poems
a makeshift to tide over a present difficulty. wān ròu zuò chuāng