wild stock or floating clouds
Xianyunyehe, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Xi á NY ú NY ě h è, which means people who are idle and divorced from the world. It's from Song Youmao's poetry of the whole Tang Dynasty.
Idiom usage
The second part of Yuan fan Kang's bamboo leaf boat: "a lifetime of empty embrace, a lifetime of sorrow, a thousand years can have a thousand years of life? Then the fleas turn back and stay with the wild cranes According to Zhang Juzheng's reply to Liu Xiaolu's words about stopping the success of the mountain in Ming Dynasty, "today I'm in the grip of Chenyang, and I'm not sure when I will return. Even if I can return, I'm just walking in the misty clouds, water and rocks with wild cranes. How can I buy a mountain and build a house? It's a big laugh for Shen Gong." Chapter 20 of biography of heroes and heroines by Wen Kang of Qing Dynasty: "the girl came out in this dress, and she looked more and more like a wild crane. There was a scene of floating out." Chapter 120 of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in Qing Dynasty: "the unique jade is as free as the idle clouds and wild cranes." in today's materialistic world, if one pays attention to self adjustment, he should pursue less materialistic desires, more spiritual pursuits, more leisurely life and less worldly tiredness.
The origin of Idioms
You Mao's poetry of the whole Tang Dynasty Volume 6: "it's hard to add a state, and it's hard to change a poem, but the idle clouds and solitary cranes can't fly."
Chinese PinYin : xián yún yě hè
wild stock or floating clouds
handle a crisis without difficulty. lǚ xiǎn ruò yí