The lyrics sung by Hua Chenyu are worse than beggars without you.

Kings and beggars

What happened? What happened? Love has lost its luster

Face to face, back to back? It hurts to struggle repeatedly.

Think love is rock solid? Who knew it would break in a second?

Does heartache have to be constantly polished? Hold you tight. I am richer than the king.

How happy I am to lose you, I am poorer than a beggar.

How deep is the pain? Oh, oh, oh, oh.

Oh, oh, oh, oh? Who is crying and who is laughing.

When a person plays two roles, the more obsessed he is, the more tortured he is.

Memories are still fanning the flames, knowing that they will fall forward

Return to loneliness with regret. What is left in the end?

How happy I was when I was richer than the king and hugged you tightly.

I'm poorer than a beggar without you? How deep is the pain?

When it's over, it's quiet

Why do you still have 10 thousand? Whoa, whoa, whoa

Who can feel it? I remember I was richer than the king.

Luxury and happiness? After losing you, I am even more down and out than a beggar.

Heartache like a knife? I miss you quietly accompanying me at that time.

Oh, oh? The most beautiful luxury in soft time

Whoa, whoa, whoa How happy is love?

How deep is the pain? How deep is the pain?

The King and the Beggar is a song sung with Aska Yang in Hua Chenyu's second album Alien. This song was written by Malaysian composer Mike Chen. Faizal Tahar composed the music, Dai Yuedong wrote the lyrics and Zheng Nan acted as the producer. It was launched on June 26th, 20 15. On August 7th, the song MV was officially released.

On March 28th, 20 16, he won the Best Popular Cooperation Award in the 23rd Oriental Billboard.

This is the first time that Hua Chenyu performed a love song in her solo album. In nearly10,000 samples, he recognized Mike Chan &; Faizal Tahar is called King &; Faizal Tahir is a Malaysian rock singer. He liked this sample so much that he was reluctant to sell it once. After much consideration, he decided to give it to Hua Chenyu to sing, hoping that more people in China could hear it.