Heguihuabiao
Heguihuabiao, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h è Gu ī Hu á Bi ǎ o, which means lamenting the changes of human life. From the postscript of SouShen.
The origin of Idioms
The first volume of Tao Qian's SouShen Houji in Jin Dynasty: "Ding Lingwei, born in the east of Liao Dynasty, studied Taoism in lingxu mountain. Later, he returned to the Liao Dynasty and gathered the Huabiao pillars of the city gate. Sometimes there are teenagers who want to shoot with a bow. The crane is flying, hovering in the air and saying, "there are birds, there are birds. Ding Lingwei will go home for a thousand years. The city is as old as before, and the people are not so good. Why don't we learn from Xianzhong? " So he went up to heaven. "
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used to exclaim about life. Example Buju written by Du Fu of Tang Dynasty: "to admire the crane in Liaodong, to chant with Chu, to hold the Si." When you are a child, you will succeed in the desert, and the crane will return to China. Tu Long, Ming Dynasty
Idiom story
It is said that Ding Lingwei, an ancient Liaodong man, studied Taoism in lingxu mountain. Later, Daocheng Huahe flew back to Liaodong and landed on the Huabiao pillar at the gate of the city. When a young man saw him, he wanted to shoot him with a bow. The crane immediately flew to the sky and wrote a poem: "there are birds, there are birds, Ding Lingwei, go home for a thousand years. The city is as old as before, and the people are not, so why not learn from the immortal tombs. " And fly away.
Chinese PinYin : hè guī huá biǎo
Heguihuabiao
as if it were raining flowers. tiān huā luàn zhuì
Green forest and black fortress. qīng lín hēi sài
the flames of war raging across the length and breadth of the region. fēng huǒ lián tiān