Seclusion
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l í sh ì D ù NSH à ng, which means transcending the secular world and avoiding the emperor. It comes from Han Feizi's Ba Shuo.
The source of the idiom is Han Feizi's Ba Shuo: "to do private things for an old friend is to say 'never abandon'; to divide public wealth is to say 'benevolent person'; to pay less attention to salary and body is to say 'gentleman'; to bend the law and bend relatives is to say 'have action'; to abandon officials and favor friends is to say 'have chivalry'; to leave the world is to say 'haughty'; to fight against orders is to say 'hard material'"
Seclusion
secure the state and comfort the people - bǎo guó ān mín
The wind, the horse and the Ox are not equal - fēng mǎ niú bù xiāng jí
Give up the easy and ask for the difficult - qì yì qiú nán
considerate right down to the most trivial detail - wú wēi bù zhì
How to kill the cobra for the snake - wéi huǐ fú cuī,wéi shé ruò hé