Calm down
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Tu ì sh í C ó NgR ó ng, which means that officials are thrifty and upright in character, calm and complacent in appearance, which can be used as models. From the book of songs, shaonan, lamb.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of songs, Zhaonan, the lamb, it is said that "if you give up your food, you will give up the snake." Zheng xuanjian: "returning food means reducing food. Since, from also. Obedience to the public means integrity and obedience. The snake is a complacent appearance. Thrifty and content, so you can be complacent. " Zhu Xi's biography: "in the reign of King Wen in the southern kingdom, he was thrifty and upright, so the poet's clothes were often beautiful, and he was calm.
Chinese PinYin : tuì shí cóng róng
Calm down
All the people go back to the sea. zhòng liú guī hǎi
fight among rivals for the throne. zhōng yuán zhú lù
like nature itself -- highest quality. hún rán zì chéng
turn back the powers of darkness. lì wǎn kuáng lán