Go back to the mountain
Entering Baoshan and returning empty, Pinyin R ù B ǎ OSH ā n é rk ō nghu í, Baoshan: a mountain of treasures. Enter the mountains full of treasures, but come back empty handed. Metaphor is a good opportunity, but nothing. It's from the book "the first record".
explain
Baoshan: a mountain where treasures are gathered. Enter the mountains full of treasures, but come back empty handed. Metaphor is a good opportunity, but nothing.
source
In the second volume of the book, Yu Dafu, the official of Nanjing, wrote a letter to Ying Qiuyun, saying, "I dare not have high hopes in my son-in-law because I am beyond the north of Mount Tai. I can't forget my feelings when I want to go back to Baoshan." It was sung by Sheng Shi (Note: Dafu is Ying Qiu's son-in-law, detailed in the six volume Chashu of peel and restore record). "To take Mount Tai and surpass the North Sea" comes from "Mencius · King Liang Hui": "to take Mount Tai and surpass the North Sea, the speaker says," I can't do it. "It's true that I can't do it." It's hard to do.
Examples
The volume of "first dial the record" says: "I dare not have high hopes in my son-in-law when I cross the north of Mount Tai. I can't forget my feelings when I want to go back to the mountain."
Chinese PinYin : rù bǎo shān ér kōng huí
Go back to the mountain
execute one man to warn a hundred. jiān yī jǐng bǎi
different tunes rendered with equal skill. tóng gōng yì qǔ
a symbol of war in ancient china. jīn gē tiě jiǎ
have a retinue before and behind. qián hū hòu yōng