Rise and fall
Rise and fall, misfortune and fortune, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x ī NGW á nghu ò f ú, meaning generally refers to all encounters. It's from jade mirror terrace.
The origin of Idioms
The second fold of Yuan Dynasty Guan Hanqing's yujingtai: "these seven strings are corresponding to the ups and downs, the sages can be right, the gods and ghosts can be scared, the common people are happy, the dust and worries are clear."
Idiom usage
Examples
Bi Yuan, Qing Dynasty, continued Zizhi Tongjian, volume 219: "I say that it's a plan for the public to prosper and perish, and I hope the public security will listen to it."
Chinese PinYin : xīng wáng huò fú
Rise and fall
Passing on the tortoise and attacking the purple. chuán guī xí zǐ
the crane screams in the middle marsh. hè míng jiǔ gāo