be benevolent to the people
Yunbuyushi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ú Nb ù y ǔ sh ī, meaning everywhere. It comes from Shanglin Fu by Sima Xiangru of Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Metaphors abound.
The origin of Idioms
In Han Dynasty, Sima Xiangru's Shanglin Fu said, "it's the fate of the mausoleum, the flow of the Ze, the clouds and the rain." In Yu Xin's Ode to Ma shefu in Hualin garden on March 3 of the Northern Zhou Dynasty, it is said that "when you go up, you will receive the rain and the clouds, and when you go down, you will receive the mountain and the sea."
Examples
In Yu Xin's Ode to Ma shefu in Hualin garden on March 3 of the Northern Zhou Dynasty, it is said that "when you go up, you will go to the mountains and hide the sea."
Chinese PinYin : yún bù yǔ shī
be benevolent to the people
The wolf and the sheep feed together. láng yáng tóng sì
take advantage of an opportunity that comes one 's way. jiàn jī ér xíng
Dethrone evil and uphold justice. chù xié chóng zhèng