Curfew to rule
As a Chinese idiom, Xi ā og à NT ú zh ì in pinyin means to be diligent in politics and manage the country well. From the biography of Luo Qiao in the history of Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The biography of Luo qiaozhuan in the history of the Ming Dynasty: "may your majesty travel carefully, play well on screen, give up villains, call back old virtues, work with officials in the imperial court, and rule by curfew, and order the law department to abide by the law carefully."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in administration, etc.
Examples
"Yuejianglou Ji" (Song Lian of Ming Dynasty): "Chen bumin wrote the story according to the order. Those who want to promote the "curfew" for the sake of governance are called "Zhenmin".
"The old book of the Tang Dynasty - Biography of Liu Fen" (the second year of Dahe's strategy): "if you are a virtuous and tough man, you should dethrone the right and left Xianxiang and the right minister."
Bai Juyi's Changqing collection (Chen Hong's changhen song Biography): "Xuanzong has been in power for a long time. He is tired of food and snacks, and has no big or small government. He was appointed to the right prime minister. He lives in a banquet to entertain himself."
Chinese PinYin : xiāo gàn tú zhì
Curfew to rule
One's childish disposition remains.. tóng xīn wèi mǐn
bureaucrats shield one another. guān guān xiāng wéi