To be burdened with worldly affairs
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ù s ú zh ī L è I, which means to be affected by secular satire and other things. It comes from Fan Bo, a biography of yuejueshu and Wudi Ji, a Book of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Yuan Kang's yuejueshu: biography of yuejuwai Fan Bo in Han Dynasty: "if you have the talent of the world, you must have the burden of the common customs." In the book of the Han Dynasty, Emperor Wudi Ji: "horses may run for thousands of miles, while scholars may be burdened with the common customs and gain fame."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: a cynic
Idiom usage
As an object; in writing
To be burdened with worldly affairs
Appreciating the virtuous and enabling - shǎng xián shǐ néng
take advantage of one 's position and power - yǐ guān zhàng shì
one 's heart is loftier than the sky - xīn bǐ tiān gāo