there are things and laws to govern them
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ǒ UW ù y ǒ uz é, which means that everything in the world has its own rules. From Shi Da Ya Ji min.
The origin of Idioms
"Poetry · Daya · Jimin" said: "born Jimin, there are things."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing. example the bark beetle of wood will not rot in sand Melon to sweet but not bark, with its sand also. If there is something, it will be poor. "Flattery" by Chen Yu in Song Dynasty
there are things and laws to govern them
wreck the country and bring ruin to the people the people - huò guó yāng mín
Obedience is better than respect - gōng jìng bù rú cóng mìng
but it is all overgrown with rank grass - jū wéi mào cǎo