Happiness brings sorrow
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin, is l è J í sh ē ng ā I, which means that when joy reaches its peak, it will turn to sadness. It comes from Qinyuanchun, a reply to Wu Shuyong's book and Yu's old work.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Kezhuang, Song Dynasty, wrote a poem in Qinyuanchun, Wu Shuyong's book and Yu's old work: "after middle age, Xiang Gelian is easy to feel, and the music is extremely sad."
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, attribute; used to admonish.
Happiness brings sorrow
mind one 's own business in order to keep out of trouble - jié shēn zì ài
have an easy control in the matter - zòng héng kāi hé
feel irreconcilable hatred for sb - bù tóng dài tiān
get rid of the stale and take in the fresh - qù gù nà xīn
discourse at random of things past and present - shuō gǔ tán jīn
follow the tracks of an overthrown chariot -- follow the same old disastrous road - dǎo qì fù zhé