Hearing the Chu Songs from
Four Sides
| Characters: |
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Pronunciation:
Si (4) Mian(4) Chu(3) Ge(1)
Explanation:
Use this to describe someone who is helplessly
surrounded or defeated
Tone:
neutral
The Story: After the overthrow of the
Qin Dynasty, vicious wars broke out between
the army led by Xiang Yu, the king of Chu,
and the army led by Liu Bang, the king of
Han. The Chu army was defeated and retreated
to Gaixia where the Han Army besieged it.
At that time, Xiang Yu had only a few troops
left and provisions were running out.
One
night, the Han army sang songs to Chu to weaken
their spirits. Xiang Yu wondered why there
were so many Chu natives in Liu's army! He
thought Liu Bang had taken over Chu's territory.
On
realizing that he had lost the upper hand,
Xiang Yu bid farewell to his favorite concubine,
Yu Ji. Then he led the rest of his army of
800 men, and made a run to the south. When
he reached the bank of Wujiang River, there
were only more than 20 men left and they were
pursued by thousands of Han soldiers. Realizing
he was defeated completely, he pulled out
his sword and committed suicide.
(Although
Xiang Yu was defeated, he is considered a
great hero in Chinese history. For thousands
of years, people praise him with all kinds
of artwork--poems, statues, plays, paintings.
The Beijing opera play, "Farewell, My
Concubine" is one of them. If you get
a chance, don't miss it to admire this great
hero!)
Usage
Example (Pinyin): Ni(3) xian(4) zai(4)
yi(3) jing(1) si(4) mian(4) chu(3) ge(1) le,
tou(2) xiang(2) ba, xian(1) sheng(1).
Usage
Example (English translation): You are
Hearing the Chu Songs from Four Sides now,
so you'd better give up!
Note:
The spoken Chinese Mandarin language has 4
spoken tones. We have attempted to re-create
those above where after each syllable we tell
you (1), (2), (3), or (4) as they correspond
to each of the 4 tones. We encourage you to
complement your Xianzai.com Chinese Idioms
newsletter with a good offline study program.