Set down the capital to support the dangerous
Ding Qing Fu Wei, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ì ngq ī NGF ú w ē I, which means to save the country from crisis. From "on salt and iron · Beihu".
The idiom comes from Han hengkuan's "on salt and iron · preparing for Hu": "in ancient times, the king of the Ming Dynasty wanted to fight against violence and defend the weak, to help the weak, and to please the monarch of a small country; if he wanted to fight against violence and incline, the innocent would be attached."
Set down the capital to support the dangerous
with a severe countenance and a harsh voice - è yán lì sè