hesitate at the crossroads
Wandering, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p á Ihu á IQ í L ù, which means walking up and down a fork in the road; it means hesitating and waiting, indecisive. It's from Guan Chao Yu.
Idiom explanation
Wandering: walking back and forth in a place, which means hesitation; crossroads: crossroads.
The origin of Idioms
In the Southern Dynasty, Qi xietiao's "watching the rain of the Dynasty", it is said that "there is no combination of movement and interest, and there are many branches wandering."
Idiom usage
To be indecisive is to be indecisive. If he is sentimentally attached to the poor city and wanders in the wrong direction, he will be punished later. Luo Binwang of Tang Dynasty: a call for Xu Jingye
Idiom story
In the Tang Dynasty, after Wu Zetian took control of the regime, she changed her name to Zhou and became queen herself. In order to expand his influence, General Xu Jingye called on people all over the world to overthrow Wu Zetian. He asked the then writer Luo Binwang to write "the battle for Xu Jingye": "if he is sentimentally attached to the poor city, wanders in the wrong direction, and sits in ignorance, he will be punished later."
hesitate at the crossroads
the wily hare has three holes to his burrow - jiǎo tù sān kū
when the flood approaches bank up to keep it out - shuǐ lái tǔ yǎn
remain unshakable and become even firmer as time goes by - lì jiǔ mí jiān
enjoy great popularity among the people - kǒu bēi zài dào