drifting clouds and wild storks
Yehe Xianyun, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ě h è Xi á NY ú n, which means people who are idle and divorced from the world. From the whole Tang Dynasty poetry.
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."
Idiom usage
(1) volume 9 of Sui Yuan Shi Hua written by Yuan Mei of Qing Dynasty: "after returning to Hejian, I see my heart." it says: "Weisi style Tao Qian Festival, wild crane with this body." (2) Chapter 63 of a dream of Red Mansions: "strange elder sister stops talking. She is as detached as a wild crane. She has a history!" (3) after Nanke Jingzhao in hongjianyuan of Qing Dynasty: "the three men are wild crane and idle cloud. They are not attracted by others. They are proud of their status and don't want to be young." Also known as "wild crane cloud". (4) yuan Liu's poem Zishi: "the frost and the scorching sun are in awe of the canal, and the wild crane is in leisure."
Chinese PinYin : yě hè xián yún
drifting clouds and wild storks
a disciple who has not taken lessons directly under the master himself. sī shū dì zǐ
the wilds were full of dead bodies of the starved. è piǎo biàn yě
face red or pale with too much anxiety. jí chì bái liǎn