Natural treasures
Wu Hua Tian Bao, a Chinese idiom, is spelled w ù Hu á Ti ā Nb ǎ o, which means all kinds of treasures. It comes from the farewell preface to Tengwang Pavilion in Hongfu in autumn written by Wang Bo of Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Bo's farewell preface to Tengwang Pavilion in Hongfu in autumn said: "the treasure of heaven is abundant, and the Dragon light shines on the ruins of cattle fighting."
Idiom story
Wang Bo, the "four heroes of the early Tang Dynasty", was exiled because he offended Emperor Gaozong of the Tang Dynasty with his "Xi Ying Wang Ji". He went to Jiaozhi to visit his father. He passed by Hongzhou on the Double Ninth Festival. Yan Boyu, the governor of Hongzhou, held a banquet for guests and chanted poems and music. Wang Bo improvised "preface to Tengwang Pavilion": "the treasure of heaven, the light of dragon, the ruins of cattle, the outstanding people, and Xu Ru got off Chen Fan's couch."
Idiom usage
Example: the wind and movement, a school of Xiao Shao Xian yuan with. The 40th chapter of Water Margin by Chen Chen in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : wù huá tiān bǎo
Natural treasures
know and observe all but stay obscure. zhī bái shǒu hēi