the time and fates are against someone
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m ì ngji ǎ NSH í Gu ā I, which means that the fate of the poor, encounter ups and downs. This is the view of idealist fatalism. It's from the third fold of money.
Analysis of Idioms
Bad luck
The origin of Idioms
Qiaomeng Fu's the third fold of "the story of money" in Yuan Dynasty: "when the cloth clothes from ancient times came to the Jinluan palace, what kind of Sheng song would lead to the painting hall is also my destiny."
Idiom usage
Combined; as an object; derogatory. I don't want to be framed by the thief Gao Qiu and exiled here. Heaven and earth don't allow me to do this. The 11th chapter of Shi Naian's Water Margin in Ming Dynasty
the time and fates are against someone
the sweat broke out all over one 's body and trickled down his back - hàn liú jiā fū
take pity on the poor and the old - lián pín xī lǎo
Beyond the present and beyond the past - chāo jīn yuè gǔ
the truth about a person or a matter - lú shān zhēn miàn