You will be gone
The Chinese idiom, sh ì Ji ā ngq ù R ǔ, means farewell. From Shi · Wei Feng · Shuo mo.
The origin of Idioms
Shi · Wei Feng · Shuo Mo: you are passing away and you are in a happy land. Zheng xuanjian: gone, gone. I'm going to say goodbye to my daughter.
Idiom usage
Examples
Empress lingsihe in the second chapter of empress in the book of the later Han Dynasty: the rebellious minister's life will not be prolonged, and you will be quiet and mysterious when you are about to die.
Zhao Yi of the Qing Dynasty's "Oubei poetry · Du Shaoling poetry": another song "go to Yixing" says: "wild people are broad-minded and have no shy face, how can they stay among the princes and Marquis for a long time." It is clear that there is a sigh of "you will be gone".
You will be gone
like gathering of birds and fishes - niǎo jí lín cuì
do or think the same without prior consulation - bù yuē ér tóng