chase the sun and drive the wind
Chasing the wind day by day is an idiom with the pronunciation of zh ú R ì Zhu ī f ē ng, which means that the horse runs very fast. It comes from the book of the Yuan emperor of the Liang Dynasty.
explain
Day by day: chasing the sun; chasing the wind: chasing the wind. A horse runs very fast. It also has the meaning of traveling day and night.
source
In the book of the emperor of the Yuan Dynasty, it is said that "riding means chasing the wind day by day, bowing means chanting apes and geese."
usage
The horse runs fast
chase the sun and drive the wind
one 's mind settles as still water - xīn rú zhǐ shuǐ
supported by irrefutable evidence - záo záo yǒu jù
there cannot be two kings in a country - tiān wú èr rì