busy oneself hankering after personal fame and gain
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is k à ngch é NZ à us ú, which means to go around for fame and fortune. It comes from the text of Beishan Yiwen written by Kong Zhigui in the Southern Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the Southern Dynasty, Qi kongzhigui's Beishan Yiwen: "Er Nai Mei Xuan's banquet is on the table, but it's broken after burning. Lotus clothing is anti dust and popular. The wind and cloud are sad and indignant, and the stone spring is sorrowful. Look at the forest and lose, look at the vegetation and lose
Idiom usage
I'm keen on fame and wealth and I'm running around. There are no more market trends. The tenth volume of Xuanhe Huapu by Zhao Ji of Song Dynasty
busy oneself hankering after personal fame and gain
tigers howl with the rise of winds - hǔ xiào fēng shēng
One son becomes a monk and seven ancestors ascend to heaven - yī zǐ chū jiā,qī zǔ shēng tiān