According to Ge Hong's Biography of Immortals in the Eastern Jin Dynasty, Liu An, the king of Huainan in the Han Dynasty, liked to learn the Tao and seek immortality, and used a lot of money to recruit disciples in this field. One day, eight white-haired old people came to ask for an audience and said they were willing to devote themselves to immortality. The gatekeeper went in and announced. Liu An said: They are all senile, how can they live forever! Obviously derailed. Take them away. Hearing that Liu An thought he was old, the old people suddenly became children. Hearing this, the Liu An hurriedly came out to meet. This idiom describes the old man regaining his youth.
Idiom: rejuvenation
Pinyin: f m n l f m n l fǎn lǎo huán tóng
Description: Restore youth from aging. Describe the elderly as full of energy.
Source: Han Jipian: "Changle Wuji Old Fuding." "Old Tang Book Eunuch Book": "It can cure the disease of fatigue and rejuvenate the child."
For example, it is easy to rejuvenate, and it is not far from entering the holy road. Wu Ming Cheng En, Journey to the West, 150 times.
Pinyin code: flht
Synonym: a crane with a good face and healthy old age.
Antonym: premature senility
Two-part allegorical saying: An 80-year-old actor plays a child.
Lantern riddle: the return of grandparents and grandchildren
Usage: as predicate, attribute and object; Of a person's appearance or spirit
English: rejuvenation