Yuedaoyirong
Yuedao Yirong, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l è D à oy í R ó ng, which means to be happy to keep the way of saints and sages and abandon the glory and wealth. It comes from Shitong pinzao by Liu Zhiji of Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Zhiji's Shi Tong pin Zao in Tang Dynasty: "You Ji Kang's biography of Gao Shi has a wide range of contents, but Yan Hui and Jue yuan have not seen any books. Although Gai Yi's two sons are happy to live in the past, they live in poverty and keep their ambition, but they are not strict with the famous religion
Idiom usage
Although the two sons are happy to live and prosper, they live in poverty and keep their ambition, but they are not strict with the Confucian classics.
Chinese PinYin : lè dào yí róng
Yuedaoyirong
Back to the mountains and back to the sea. huí shān zhuǎn hǎi
Keep your eyebrows and eyes in order. ān méi dài yǎn