Hengyang Yanduan
Hengyang Yanduan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h é ngy á ngy à NDU à n, which means that there is Huiyan peak in the south peak of Hengshan Mountain, and it is said that it is the boundary for geese to come and go. It's a metaphor for not being heard. It comes from "sending Li Shaofu to xiazhong and Wang Shaofu to Changsha".
The origin of Idioms
Gao Shi, Tang Dynasty, wrote a poem to send Li Shaofu to exile Xia and Wang Shaofu to exile Changsha: "the cry of the apes in Wuxia is a few lines of tears, and the return of the geese in Hengyang is a few letters."
Idiom usage
Hengyang Yanduan three thousand Road, Wuxia ape cry twelve peaks. Annam collection · eguan Shuhuai by Chen Yiji in Yuan Dynasty
Hengyang Yanduan
It's like an arrow to return home - guī xīn sì jiàn
take up the cudgels for the injured party - bào dǎ bù píng