Seclusion
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l í sh ì D ù NSH à ng, which means transcending the secular world and avoiding the emperor. It comes from Han Feizi's Ba Shuo.
The source of the idiom is Han Feizi's Ba Shuo: "to do private things for an old friend is to say 'never abandon'; to divide public wealth is to say 'benevolent person'; to pay less attention to salary and body is to say 'gentleman'; to bend the law and bend relatives is to say 'have action'; to abandon officials and favor friends is to say 'have chivalry'; to leave the world is to say 'haughty'; to fight against orders is to say 'hard material'"
Chinese PinYin : lí shì dùn shàng
Seclusion
Playing tricks in the pond. huáng chí nòng bīng
seductive looks incite to wantonness. yě róng huì yín
be handsome and highly esteemed. xiàng mào táng táng