rushing headlong into disaster
A blind man riding a blind horse is a very dangerous or dangerous situation without knowing it.
[Pinyin] m á NgR é NQ í Xi ā m ǎ
[source] Article 61 of "new sayings of the world - Paidiao" by Liu Yiqing of the Southern Song Dynasty: Huannan county and yinjingzhou have spoken the same language. Gu Kaizhi said, "there is no fire in the plain. Huan said, "the coffin is wrapped with white cloth, and the coffin is hung with a tail.". Yin said, "throw fish into the abyss and release birds. It was a dangerous speech. Huan said, "the spearhead is rice, the sword head is cooking. "Yin said," a hundred year old man climbs a dead branch. Gu said, "the windlass lies on the well. One of Yin's soldiers was sitting, saying, "a blind man riding a blind horse is near the deep pool in the middle of the night. Yin said, "aggressive! "It's the same with Zhong Kan.
It is very dangerous
Blind man and blind horse
Chinese PinYin : máng rén qí xiā mǎ
rushing headlong into disaster
hold up one 's head high and advance by long strides. áng tóu kuò bù
Twisting the earth to burn incense. niǎn tǔ fén xiāng
console the people and punish the wicked. diào mín fá zuì
be perceptive of the minutest detail. dòng chá qiū háo