seek safety in flight
It's a Chinese idiom, Li ū zh ī D à J í in pinyin. It's a good idea to slip away secretly. It's from the 28th chapter of Li Baojia's officialdom.
The origin of Idioms
The 28th chapter of Li Baojia's Officialdom: in a group of snobbish people, he has already run away
Idiom usage
Chapter 19 of a short history of civilization: "it turns out that as soon as he saw the closing of the business, he knew that he wanted to pay for the tea. He had already run downstairs and waited in advance." Chapter 24 of Zeng Pu's the flowers of the evil sea in the Qing Dynasty: "the young swallows take advantage of their disturbance to escape." Ye Shengtao's "three or five more dues": some slip away and quietly climb on the fourth-class bus to Shanghai. Sha Ting's two brothers in the story of grandfather: "he has made up his mind that if he is forced too hard, he will run away!"
Analysis of Idioms
Run away, go ahead, bow to straw sandals, rub oil on sole board
seek safety in flight
hardship of travel without shelter - cān fēng sù lù
slip over nothing whether big or small - jù xì wú yí
low prices for grain hurt the peasants - gǔ jiàn shāng nóng
Three days after parting, we should treat each other with new eyes - shì bié sān rì,dāng guā mù xiāng dài
make a grass knot or champ a ring in order to repay kindness - jié cǎo xián huán
A man of letters but not of deeds - yǒu wén wú xíng