Selfless light
Selfless light, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w ú s ī zh ī Gu ā ng, which means to compare the emperor's virtue. It comes from the book of rites, Confucius' leisurely residence.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of rites, Confucius lives in Leisure: "the heaven is selfless, the earth is selfless, and the sun and the moon are selfless."
Idiom usage
As an object; used in figurative sentences.
Examples
Bai Juyi's poem "crow nine Swords" in the Tang Dynasty: "for the king, let the unselfish light reach all things, and the stinging insects will sprout the grass."
Selfless light
the scorching days during the fifth month and sixth month of the lunar calendar - wǔ huáng liù yuè