Broken jade
Broken jade zero Ji, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Su ì y ù L í NGJ ī, which means a metaphor for exquisite and short poetry. It's from the continuation of the evil sea flower.
The idiom comes from the wedge of the old man yangu's "xunie Haihua": "at that time, famous people like Wu Qingqing, Wang liumen, came from Su from time to time. They lingered on poetry and wine. After singing and drinking, they broke the jade and the windows, and the ink marks were messy."
Broken jade
a wild horse running about without reins - yě mǎ wú jiāng
Advocate elegance and dethrone the floating - chóng yǎ chù fú