What is the meaning of "The roc rises with the wind one day and rises up 90,000 miles"?

"Why don't you rise up with the wind and rock up to 90,000 miles?" It means why don't you rise with the wind and fly up to 90,000 miles above the sky?

It's an elegant version of the Internet phrase "You're so powerful, why don't you go up to the sky".

Expanding Knowledge

1. "Flying 90,000 li above the sky?" The original text is as follows:

"On Li Yong"

Tang - Li Bai

The roc rises with the wind one day, and the rock rises ninety thousand miles.

If the wind breaks and comes down, it will still be able to shake the drizzling water.

The world sees me in a different light, and laughs when they hear me speak.

Father Xuan can still be afraid of the younger generation, but the husband should not despise the young.

2. Translation

The roc rises from the wind one day, and is lifted up to a height of 90,000 miles.

If it stops when the wind breaks, its power is so great that it can dry up the water of the ocean.

The people of the time saw that I had a tendency to make strange remarks, and laughed when they heard them.

The Confucius also said that the new generation is fearful, a man can not take the young lightly!

3, Li Bai and "on Li Yong"

This poem is the work of Li Bai's youth. Li Yong in Kaiyuan seven years (719) to nine years (721) around the time, served as Yuzhou (now Chongqing) assassin. It is said that Li Yong was "quite self-respecting" (The Old Book of Tang - Biography of Li Yong), conceited and famous, and had a reserved attitude towards young people. Li Bai was dissatisfied with this, in the farewell wrote this attitude is not polite "on the Li Yong" poem, in return.