A man in a bag
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ā D à IR é NW ù, which means that it used to refer to the trusted person of the person in power or the person who kept it in reserve. It comes from the biography of Shi Shidian in the history of Song Dynasty.
interpretation
Used to refer to a trusted person or a person who keeps a record of the authority.
source
Shi Shidian biography in the history of the Song Dynasty: Shi Dianpai searched for talents and put the calligraphy in the bag. It is said that Shu is far away from the imperial court, so it is hard for people to see it. Because Zhou's publications are always filled with people in his pocket, and they are selfishly used, so that the content is bad. ——Lu Xun's pseudo freedom Book postscript
Chinese PinYin : jiā dài rén wù
A man in a bag
lookers-on see most of the game. bàng guān zhě qīng
It's easy to change, but hard to change. jiāng shān hǎo gǎi,běn xìng nán yí