ride on the crest of success
Fortune, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ì Hu ì f ē ngy ú n, which means to have a good fortune. It comes from the biography of Zhao Ying.
Analysis of Idioms
"Fengyun Jihui" and "Fengyu Fengyun"
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Zhao Ying in the book of Jin, the history of the Old Five Dynasties, it is said that "although Zhao Ying met with the wind and the clouds and visited the vassal states, she was easily buried in the Jedi, but eventually she was buried in her hometown, and her journey of Gai Renxin was connected with ya'er." The first fold of fan Zhang Ji Shu by Gong Tianting in Yuan Dynasty: "the king of Wen should dream of a flying bear and meet LV Wangji."
Idiom usage
It is a metaphor for an able man who meets with opportunities and suddenly meets the wind and the clouds. He is miserable all the year round and gets the moon hanging high. The second chapter of scholars by Wu Jingzi in Qing Dynasty
ride on the crest of success
a loss may turn out to be a gain - běi sǒu shī mǎ
a well-behaved and dignified country girl - lín xià fēng yùn
One's breathing is barely perceptible. - qì xī yān yān