the path winds along mountain ridges
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is f ē nghu í L ù Zhu ǎ n, which means to describe mountains and winding roads. It refers to a new turn after a setback or failure. It also refers to the turning point. The path of scenic spots is complicated. From the story of the drunken man Pavilion.
The origin of Idioms
Ouyang Xiu of Song Dynasty wrote the story of the drunken man's Pavilion: "when the road turns around, there is a pavilion on the spring, so is the drunken man's pavilion."
Idiom usage
We sit in the train as if we were in a boat on the river. The scene changes every moment, making you dizzy. From Xi'an to Lanzhou by Ye Shengtao
the path winds along mountain ridges
respect justice and abide by the laws - fèng gōng rú fǎ
the very fowls and dogs have no peace - jī quǎn bù níng