Selfless light
Selfless light, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w ú s ī zh ī Gu ā ng, which means to compare the emperor's virtue. It comes from the book of rites, Confucius' leisurely residence.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of rites, Confucius lives in Leisure: "the heaven is selfless, the earth is selfless, and the sun and the moon are selfless."
Idiom usage
As an object; used in figurative sentences.
Examples
Bai Juyi's poem "crow nine Swords" in the Tang Dynasty: "for the king, let the unselfish light reach all things, and the stinging insects will sprout the grass."
Chinese PinYin : wú sī zhī guāng
Selfless light
the sincerity of offering the warmth of the sun to sb. xiàn pù zhī chén
leave a name that will stink to eternity. yí chòu wàn nián
the ways of heaven are impartial. tiān dào wú qīn