The wind swayed the clouds
It is a Chinese idiom, which refers to the rise of the Yellow River. It comes from the ode to Xidu written by Ban Gu of the Han Dynasty: "then the wind rises and the clouds sway, floating and spreading.".
interpretation
Fly up with the wind and cloud. It's also a metaphor for prosperity.
source
Ban Gu's Ode to Xidu in the Han Dynasty: "then the wind swayed and the clouds swayed Wang Bo's Ode to Jiucheng palace in the Tang Dynasty said, "the wind and the clouds are swaying, and I have a rest in the capital of God."
Examples
Give gold, divide silk, offer grace and splendor, and make people purple and tiny. The poem of March 3 in Guizhou written by song Zhiwen in Tang Dynasty
usage
As predicate, object, attribute; used in figurative sentences
The wind swayed the clouds
Public regulations and secret admonition - gōng guī mì jiàn
giant earthquakes and landslides - tiān bēng dì tān