Honest and just
Honesty and justice, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Li á nm í NGG ō ngzh è ng, which means no corruption, honesty and justice. It comes from Yu jideng's allusions in the Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The 37th chapter of Water Margin written by Shi Naian of Ming Dynasty: "three people hide in the reeds. When they look behind, the torch is approaching. The more flustered they are, they walk high and low and bump into each other in the reeds."
Idiom usage
The eleventh volume of Yu jideng's the chronicle of Allusions in the Ming Dynasty: "to be honest and just, to rule the prefecture." Master Nan Zhenzhen ~, I don't want to be read by the adults of Hetai. Who doesn't say it's unjust. (Chapter 11 of biography of heroes and heroines by Wen Kang in Qing Dynasty)
Honest and just
secluded orchid in a deserted valley - kōng gǔ yōu lán
full of ideas for state policy agnosia - jīng shén mǎn fù