These are two different famous sayings, combined into one sentence.
"A man should die in the wilderness, and his ears should be buried with his body wrapped in horse leather." These were the heroic words of Ma Yuan, the general of the Eastern Han Dynasty, on the battlefield.
This is the origin of the horse-leather shroud. This word is often used to describe the fearless spirit of fighting bravely and dedicating oneself to the battlefield when joining the army. It means that there is nothing terrible about death. At most, the body will be rolled up in a piece of horsehide and transported back to the hometown.
And "Jin Ge and Iron Horse" is an idiom, which means that the sword shines with golden light and the horse is equipped with iron armor. A metaphor for war. It also describes the majestic appearance of a warrior galloping with a gun in hand. From the "New History of the Five Dynasties: Biography of Li Xiji": "The golden sword and the iron horse were trampled in the Ming Dynasty." This idiom was quoted in the Chinese idiom, which made the word widely circulated. The content of the word is as follows: Through the ages, there are no heroes who can find Sun Zhongmou. On the dance pavilion and singing stage, the wind is always blown away by the rain. The setting sun, the grass and trees, the ordinary alleys, where the slaves of humanity once lived. I think back then, when we were strong and strong, we could swallow thousands of miles like a tiger.