What is the last sentence in the defeat?

The last sentence of defeat is beyond gold and jade. There is an eight-character idiom in the synopsis of the golden chamber, which comes from Liu Ji's "Orange Water Talk" in the Ming Dynasty.

Liu Mingji's "Sincere Ji Bo Orange People's Words": "Look at those people who are sitting in the high hall, riding big horses and drinking as drunk as a fiddler, who are not majestic, who are magnificent, who are not beyond the golden jade, who are defeated!"

Explanation:

Look at those people sitting in the high hall, riding big horses, drinking wine and eating delicious food. Which one is not dignified, not awesome, not outstanding, and not worth emulating? But no matter where you go, who is not as gold as jade on the outside, but as cotton wool on the inside?

Used to describe people who have only gorgeous appearance and no practical skills.

Synonyms: flashy and superficial.

Synonym definition:

1, flashy

Hua: Flowering. Flowers bloom beautifully, but they don't bear fruit. The metaphor is beautiful and the content is empty.

For example, in-depth study and blind pursuit of quick success and instant benefit are definitely flashy.

2. It's only superficial

It only represents appearances, not reality.

Example: this self-proclaimed first-class boxer is only superficial and simply vulnerable.