be off to distant places
The Chinese idiom, G ā of ē iyu ǎ NZ ǒ u, is used to describe leaving a place and escaping to a distance. It comes from the biography of Zhuo Mao in the book of the later Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
"Zhuo Mao Zhuan in the book of the later Han Dynasty:" if you don't want to repair it, you'd rather fly away than be evil in the world
Idiom usage
To leave a place completely. example: when things are urgent, ~ can't escape. Ancient and modern Zaju: gossip of fishermen and woodcutters
Analysis of Idioms
Fly away
be off to distant places
The earthworm can float through the dyke - chǐ yǐn chuān dī,néng piāo yī yì
the voice of singing reverberates round the beams of a house for days - gē shēng rào liáng