weal and woe
Good luck, bad luck, bad luck, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j í Xi ō nghu ò f ú, which means all kinds of circumstances of people. It comes from the biography of taishici in the annals of the Three Kingdoms.
Idiom usage
As object and attribute. Chapter 81 of Peng Gong An, a Taoist of Qing Dynasty's greedy dream: "today I enter this pine forest villa. I don't know whether it is good or bad. I have to find out."
The origin of Idioms
Wu Zhi, biography of Tai Shi CI in the annals of the Three Kingdoms: "it's for good luck, bad luck, bad luck and so on. I don't only accept this crime."
weal and woe
shining spears and armoured horses - a symbol of war in ancient china - tiě mǎ jīn gē
fearless of death for a just cause - dà yì lǐn rán