Xing or hang up?

It's xing.

Pinyin: jǐng háng xíng zhǐ. Scene, Line and Stop are China idioms.

Interpretation: Avenue is for people to walk. "Jing" means big, and "Xing" means road. Jing (road) line (walk) station.

Source: "The Book of Songs Xiaoya Che Jurisdiction" "The mountain is high and the scenery stops." Zheng Xuan wrote: "The ancients admired people with high morality and enlightened walkers did it." Say, scenery, road. See Zhu Biography.

The tail chapter said that the wedding car crossed the mountain and entered the road. The poet looked up at the high mountain, overlooking the road, facing his wife, full of emotion, and the poem came from the heart: "The mountain stops, and the scenery stops."

This is narrative and landscape writing, but it is more of a metaphor. The bride's beautiful figure and loyal virtue are as admirable and desirable as mountains and roads. Poetry is rich in meaning and magnificent, so it has become the best image to express an admiration and a famous sentence through the ages.

The next two sentences, "four legs, six legs, like a harp", not only echo the two sentences in the first chapter, but also form a cyclical trend, while six legs, like strings, contain the poet's rich imagination of a beautiful and harmonious life after marriage. The last two sentences directly express the feelings and the whole complexity.