A song of betrayal
Song of the underhand, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ù sh ǒ UZH ī g ē, meaning refers to the last chant. It's from the book of rites on the Tangong.
Song of underhand
[pronunciation] f ù sh ǒ UZH ī g ē
It refers to the singing before death.
[source] in the book of rites, on the sandalwood bow: "Confucius was made by fleas, holding down his hand and swaying his staff at the door. The song says:" is Mount Tai decadent? Is Liang Muqi bad? Is a wise man withered? " Enter with songs and sit in front of the house. When Zi Gong heard of it, he said, "if Mount Tai is decadent, then I will be in peace; if beams are bad, and philosophers are withered, then I will be in peace.". The master will be ill. " And then they came in. The master said, "why did you come so late The king of Ming Dynasty is not happy, but who in the world can give it? It's almost impossible for him to die. " He was ill for seven days
A song of betrayal
grief at separation and joy in union - bēi huān lí hé
be endowed with extraordinary talents - rú chuán dà bǐ
strange voice or an affected manner - guài shēng guài qì