I'll be gone soon
It's a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is Hu ī zh ī J ì Q ù, which means to order him to leave immediately. It is used to describe obeying the command and waiting for the dispatch. It comes from Xin Qiji's poem "Qinyuan spring will stop drinking and keep away from wine cup".
The origin of Idioms
Xin Qiji of the Song Dynasty wrote in Qinyuan spring: the general stops drinking, and the cup should not be used near: "the cup should be worshipped again, and the way is:" the leader will go immediately, and the call must come. "
Idiom usage
I'd like to call an emissary at this time, but I can't command him at another time. Xia Xie's Chronicles of China and the West in Qing Dynasty volume 20
I'll be gone soon
melt like ice and break like tiles - bīng sàn wǎ jiě
peaceful and mild steps -- walking slowly - yōng róng yǎ bù
man 's will , not heaven , decides - rén dìng shèng tiān
spring returns to the good earth - chūn huí dà dì