store up gems and pile up gold
Jiyuduijin, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī y ù Du ī J ī n, which means to describe the accumulation of wealth. From mocking boy.
There are many gold and jade that can be piled up. from the poem "mocking the youth" written by Li He in the Tang Dynasty: "pile up gold and jade to boast of gallantry." He is a good poor man in the world, but he is an old man in that world. (the eleventh chapter of journey to the west by Wu Chengen of Ming Dynasty)
store up gems and pile up gold
a bird which has been hurt by an arrow - shāng gōng zhī niǎo
the voice of singing reverberates round the beams of a house for days - gē shēng rào liáng