have used up one 's literary talent at all
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Ji ā ngy ā NC á ij ì n, which means Liang Jiangyan in the Southern Dynasty, with few literary names, is known as Jianglang in the world. In his later years, there were no good sentences in his poems. Later, it is often used to describe the decline of talent and thinking. From southern history.
The origin of Idioms
In Volume 59 of Southern history, Jiang Yan's biographies ~ 45 ~ Yan Shao's articles show that he had a slight retreat in the late Festival. When Yun was the prefect of Xuancheng, he came back and started to park the temple of Zen spirit. YeMeng called himself Zhang Jingyang, saying: "I sent a piece of brocade to him before, but I can still see it today. "Yantan got a few feet in his arms, and the man said angrily," it's all cut up. When Gu saw Qiu Chi, he said, "I can't use this number of feet to leave it to you. "I'm sorry. After staying in yeting, Meng Yi's husband called himself Guo PU. He called himself Yan and said, "I have a pen that I have been with you for many years. "Yan was given a five color pen in his arms. After that, there was no beautiful sentence in the poem, which was called the end of talent. All the works were compiled as the collection of the former and the latter, together with the ten chronicles of the Qi Dynasty. To taste the classics of chixian county to make up for the lack of mountains and seas, it failed. A son is an heir.
Idiom story
During the Liang Dynasty in the Southern Dynasty, the writer Jiang Yan studied hard in his youth, and his works were very popular. After the official came to Guanglu, his articles were not as good as before, and his poems were plain. It turned out that when he went to Xuancheng, he met Guo Pu in yeting's dream. Guo Pu asked him to return the five color pen. From then on, his literary thought dried up and he was lost.
Chinese PinYin : jiāng yān cái jìn
have used up one 's literary talent at all
find amusement when the occasion arises. féng chǎng yóu xì
a single hair out of nine ox hides. jiǔ niú yī háo
be in harmony in appearanc but at variance in heart. mào hé qíng lí