hide oneself from place to place
Hiding in the East, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ō ngdu ǒ x ī C á ng, which means hiding everywhere to avoid disaster. It comes from "cutting down Jin and prospering Qi".
The origin of Idioms
The fourth part of Ming Dynasty's Wumingshi's "attacking Jin and revitalizing Qi" says: "the soldiers killed by him died first. They all cried and hid in the East. The spears, swords and halberds were all the same."
Idiom usage
The Impatiens pull away the catapult and hit the ball in a row, making it a minion. The ninety eighth chapter of three heroes and five righteousness by Shi Kunyu in Qing Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Eastern Tibet and Western Tibet
hide oneself from place to place
sincerity can make metal and stone crack - jīn shí wèi kāi
denounce the guilty and to chastise - shēng zuì zhì tǎo
poor in talent but very ambitious - kōng fù gāo xīn
sincere words and earnest wishes - yǔ zhòng xīn chén