abandon oneself to nature
It is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ī Qi ū y ī h è, which originally refers to the place where the hermit lives. After more used to refer to the landscape. It comes from the book of the Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Hill: Earth mountain; gully: gully.
The origin of Idioms
"If you fish in a gully, all things will not cheat your ambition; if you perch late in a hill, it will not be easy for you to enjoy yourself."
Idiom usage
As object and attribute, it refers to the landscape. Example Liu Yiqing's "new sayings of the world · pinzao" in the Southern Song Dynasty: "to appoint a temple and make a hundred officials' standard, a minister is inferior to a bright one; a hill and a ravine is a fault." My brother crossed each hill and ravine, and built a Kuang on the side to form a life and death alliance with the mountain. Xu HongZu's preface to the poems of xiaoxiangshan plum blossom hall in Ming Dynasty and Wang Bo's Shangming yuanwaiqi in Tang Dynasty: "one hill and one ravine, the same Ruan is from the west mountain; one roar and one song, the same Ji Kang is from the north." Lu You's poem "Mushan" in Song Dynasty: "one hill and one ravine, I promise, I don't need to admire mingtangcai more." In Qing Dynasty Gong Zizhen's Miscellaneous Poems of the reign of Jihai (154), "one hill and one ravine is my forerunner, and I want to talk about Jinghua's feelings."
Chinese PinYin : yī qiū yī hè
abandon oneself to nature
a general who rather prefers to be beheaded than to surrender. duàn tóu jiāng jūn
a person of noble aspirations. yǒu zhì zhī shì
Be willing to live in poverty. gān pín shǒu fēn