Sanghu pengshu
Sanghu pengshu, a Chinese idiom, is s ā NGH ù P é ngsh ū in pinyin, which means to weave mulberry branches as the door and erect awning bars as the pivot. A poor family. It comes from Huansha Ji Yiqiu.
The origin of Idioms
Liang Chenyu's "Huansha Ji · Yiqiu" in Ming Dynasty: "if Yuanxian is a good man, sanghu pengshu, Yanyuan is a good man, eating and drinking."
Sanghu pengshu
seek life in the midst of death - sǐ zhōng qiú shēng
patriotic and loyal to the throne - měi rén xiāng cǎo