Songyun Festival
Songyun Festival, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is s ō ngy ú nzh ī Ji é, which means that the material of pine and bamboo is tough and never withers in the cold, because "songyun Festival" is used to refer to steadfast moral integrity. Jun, Zhu. It comes from the biography of Liuzhuang in the book of Sui Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Liuzhuang in the book of Sui written by Wei Zheng of Tang Dynasty, it is said that "Liang Zhu Yi, ye Chongguang, entrusted the imperial court with sincerity. Now, only after that can we see the festival of songyun."
Idiom story
In 579 A.D., Emperor Xuandi of the Northern Zhou Dynasty Yu Wenxuan died, and young emperor Jingdi Yu Wenxuan ascended the throne. Zheng zehe, a doctor of internal history, and Liu Fang, a doctor of imperial history, forged an imperial edict calling Yang Jian into the palace to take over military and political power. Liu Zhuang, a minister of the southern Liang Dynasty, entered the pass at the will of emperor Xiaokui of the Ming Dynasty. Yang Jian summoned him and praised that emperor Liangming had the virtue of songyun, which eased bilateral relations and jointly dealt with Wei chijun.
Idiom usage
To be formal as an object; refer to a person's integrity.
Examples
He is an old man of high moral standing and has the virtue of songyun.
Songyun Festival
The army did not move, food and grass first - bīng mǎ wèi dòng, liáng cǎo xiān xíng