Wish of macchus
Maiqiuzhizhu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m à IQI à zh à, which means to speak out. It comes from the book of reply to nephew Xu.
The origin of Idioms
Gu Yanwu's reply to Xu's nephew Gong Su Shu in the Qing Dynasty: "forget his position and pay tribute to this rave. Please write a poem called Qizhao to replace maiqiu's wish."
Idiom usage
To remonstrate with outspoken words. example please accept my best wishes.
Idiom story
During the spring and Autumn period, Duke Huan of Qi went to maiqiu and saw an 83 year old man. Duke Huan ordered the old man to bless Duke Huan with his longevity. Old man maiqiu wishes the LORD a long life, and gold and jade are the treasures of bitches. He also wishes the Lord no shame to learn, no evil to ask, the sage to be near, and the admonishment to get people. He also wishes the Lord no offence to his ministers and the people.
Wish of macchus
reach the same goal by different means roads lead to the same goal - shū tú tóng guī
from the strictly official point of view - zài guān yán guān
as clean as ice and as pure as jade - bīng qīng yù cuì
the people are more important than the ruler - mín guì jūn qīng