The painting Along the River During the Qingming Festival depicts a bustling scene of the life of ordinary people along the banks of the Bian River by the Northern Song capital of Kaifeng. The earliest version, now in the collection of the Palace Museum in Beijing, was painted by the Northern Song artist Zhang […]
活用成語:雞鳴戒旦
The idiom 雞鳴戒旦, literally “the cock crows, announcing the dawn” originates from a poem called the Cock Crows in the Odes Of Qi in the ancient Chinese classic the Book of Poetry. The poem imagines a virtuous woman repeatedly cautioning the licentious and dissolute Duke of Ai to attend to affairs of state when the […]
活用成語:徒勞無功
The ancient Chinese Taoist thinker and philosopher Zhuangzi, in the Revolution of Heaven chapter of the Outer Chapters section of the work attributed to him, wrote the curious phrase 「今蘄行周於魯,是猶推舟於陸也」: “attempting these days to put into practice the old ways of Zhou in Lu is like pushing a boat on dry land.”
寧靜
A quiet, peaceful, tranquil scene, composed mainly of gentle blues and serene greens. The greens surround the statue in the background, a Buddha figure in a meditative pose, seated on a platform of bluish rock. The statue’s pose is mirrored by that of the elderly woman in the foreground, seated on a rock island in […]
活用成語:點石成金
The story of the Midas Touch originates from Greek mythology. It is a cautionary tale of being careful of what you wish for, and of the perils of unchecked greed. In modern usage, it seems to have lost this cautionary aspect, and now simply refers to the ability to transform something pedestrian into something remarkable, […]
燈籠禮物
The word “present” is a verb, a noun and an adjective. To present /prɪˋzɛnt/ something is to make a gift of it; as a noun, present /ˋprɛznt/ means the object given. The verb can also be used to mean “to make available,” or “to make readily accessible,” as in, to present a play or […]
活用成語:得寸進尺
The idiom 得寸進尺 is very interesting for several reasons. First of all, it has a very close equivalent in English: “give him an inch and he’ll take a mile.” That is, if you allow somebody something even apparently inconsequential, they may well become greedy and try to get more from you. The second reason it […]
迪化街
When it was first constructed, in the 1850s, in the Dadaocheng area Taipei, Dihua Street was known as Center Street, presumably because of its central location within that part of town. The origin of some sections of the street stretch back further, to the time of Dutch rule, so it can lay claim to being […]
活用成語:三人成虎
This idiom originally comes from the second part of the Strategies of Wei in the ancient Chinese text the Strategies of the Warring States, or Zhan Guo Ce. Wei was one of the major states during the Warring States, a period of political upheaval and weak central government, as was the state of Zhao. When […]
活用成語:懸崖勒馬
The idiom 懸崖勒馬 comes from quite an early work, the Yuan dynasty play Zhi Yong Ding Qi by Zheng Dehui. In the play there is the line “呀!你如今船到江心補漏遲,抵多少臨崖勒馬纔收騎”, which means
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