there was no literary or military feat of which he was not capable
Wenjingwuwei, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w é NJ ī NGW ǔ w ě I, which means to govern the country from both civil and military aspects. It comes from the inscription of Guogong Temple written by Yan Zhenqing of Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Yan Zhenqing's inscription on Guogong temple in the Tang Dynasty said, "the Confucian classics and the martial arts teach the disciples to walk."
Idiom usage
It refers to both literature and martial arts
Examples
Both of them have the talent of literature, classics and martial arts, and they have a broad knowledge of the past and the present. Awakening the world by Feng Menglong in Ming Dynasty (Volume 11)
there was no literary or military feat of which he was not capable
Light clothes make good fortune - yì qīng chéng féi
a red heart of complete dedication - zhōng xīn chì dǎn
of men shouting and horses neighing - rén yǔ mǎ sī
from the shallower to the deeper - yóu qiǎn rù shēn
not to change one 's voice and expression because of emotion - bù dòng shēng sè
hid work in the mountains and pass to like-minded people - cáng zhū míng shān