Interpretation: Look at the picture to find a good horse. It used to be a metaphor for doing things rigidly by dogma, but now it refers to finding things according to clues and getting them easily.
Source: "After Conan visited the old": Naked generals in the south, carving boats for swords and looking for horses according to pictures, so the pursuit of material must rely on the shadow of the door, and the selection of people must be limited to qualifications, while the past dynasties were stupid and the talents were not prosperous. Another way of saying it comes from "Biography of Han Shu Belle" by Ban Gu in the Eastern Han Dynasty: "Today, we obviously don't follow the way of being a scholar, but we have to choose the scholars of that time by the method of three generations. We still have to look at the map of Bole to get a good job in the city, but we can't get it."
Synonym: Learn from books, copy mechanically, step by step.
Antonym: not stick to one pattern, improvise.
Lantern riddle: Draw a sad horse and come with Bole (to use an idiom).
Two-part allegorical saying: The son of Bole looks for a horse (to use an idiom)
Rhyming words: the friendship between host and guest, don't give up the cover, calm and calm, passionate world, smoke and land are the same, they don't stand side by side, advocate discussion, come to their senses, make people cry.