"Shuo Yong" is a large series of classical Chinese books in the Ming Dynasty. It was compiled by Tao Zongyi, a scholar in the late Yuan and early Ming Dynasties. It is a collection of various selected notes from the Han, Wei, Song and Yuan Dynasties. The title of the book is taken from the Yangtze saying "Everything in the heaven and earth is Guo Ye, and the Five Classics are said by many people." "Shuo Yi" means that the Five Classics are said by many people.
The book has more than 100 volumes and tens of thousands of entries. It collects the works of famous writers from the Qin and Han Dynasties to the Song and Yuan Dynasties, including hundreds of scholars, various notes, poems, and literary theories. The content is all-encompassing, including classics, history, biographies, Baishi's miscellaneous books, archaeological museums, mountains and rivers, customs, insects, fishes, plants, poetry reviews, ancient Chinese characters, strange stories, astrological inquiries, etc.
"Shuo Yong" is one of the more important large-scale privately compiled series in the past dynasties. The famous poet Yang Weizhen in the late Yuan Dynasty and early Ming Dynasty wrote a preface to it, saying: "Scholars need this book to expand their knowledge and knowledge." Basic introduction Name of the work: Shuo Yong Creation period: Late Yuan Dynasty and early Ming Dynasty Author: Tao Zongyi Type: Introduction to the author of the Ming Dynasty Classical Chinese Series, corrected version, popular version, supplementary content, book catalogue, Volume 1, Volume 2, Volume 3, Volume 4, Volume 5, Volume 6, Volume 7, Volume 8, Volume 9, Volume 10, Volume 11, Volume 12, Volume 13, Volume 14, Volume 15, the author introduces Tao Zongyi (1321~1407), courtesy name Jiucheng, nickname Nancun, a native of Huangyan, Taizhou, Zhejiang. His father, Tao Yu, was named Mingyuan and was born in Xiao'ao Mountain. According to legend, his family is the descendant of Tao Yuanming of the Eastern Jin Dynasty. He wrote more than 10 books and hundreds of volumes in his lifetime. This "Shuo Yong" was included in the "Sikuquanshu". In addition, the "Sikuquanshu" also included his "Nancun Poetry Collection", "Guofeng Zunjing", "Four Books Preparation", "Leiyuan of the Ancient Tang Dynasty", "Private Riding in Cao Mang", "Continuation of Travel Notes", "Ancient Engraved Notes", "Yeting Records of the Yuan Dynasty", "Golden Pill Secrets", "Canglang Song", "Chunhua Tie" Examination" and other works. In terms of the number of literati and scholars in Taizhou whose works have been recorded in the "Sikuquanshu", there is really no other scholar in Taizhou. Corrected version Tao Zongyi compiled "Shuo Yong" and died of illness soon after. The manuscript was collected by several Songjiang scribes. Seventy years later, the sixty-five-year-old Yu Wenbo, who was serving as deputy envoy to Huguang, resigned from office and returned to Songjiang. He borrowed "Shuo Yong" from Gong's house and read it carefully. He felt that "this book collects everything, records it thoroughly, and is beneficial to future generations." "But I found that the copyist was careless and had many missing words, so I sat in the "Wanjuan Tower" every day and revised them one by one. It took nearly ten years to reorganize it into 100 volumes. It can be seen that Tao Zongyi’s original book project was huge. At the end of the Ming Dynasty and the beginning of the Qing Dynasty, Tao Jue, a native of Yao'an, Yunnan, added to "Shuo Yong" and compiled it into 120 volumes. Tao Jue signed himself in Huangyan and was the distant grandson of Zong Yi. In 1914, scholar Zhang Zongxiang served as an inspector of the Ministry of Education in Beijing and began to get in touch with ancient books. In 1919, Fu Zongxiang, the Minister of Education, asked Zhang to organize and serve as the director of the Capital Library. Lu Xun was also working in the Ministry of Education at that time. He told Zhang Zongxiang that the library contained 120 volumes of manuscripts of Shuo Zong from the Ming Dynasty and asked him to copy them for everyone to study. From then on, Zhang Zongxiang, the "Master of Tie Ruyi Library", embarked on the road of collating ancient books, which took him 6 years. Zhang Yuanji of the Commercial Press got the message and went to Zhang Zongxiang to copy the school version. It was published under the name "Hanfenlou" in November 1927. The first edition was sold out quickly, and even Oxford University in the UK ordered two sets. In August 1990, Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House compiled and published photocopies of the 120-volume version of Tao Zongyi and Tao Jue and the 46-volume version of "Shuo Shuo Yong" under the name "Shuo Shuo Yun". This is one of the largest book series published in contemporary China. There are two popular versions of "Shuo Yong": one is based on the Ming Dynasty Longqing and Wanli manuscripts collected by Mr. Zhang Zongxiang in the original Peking Library, and the Ming Dynasty manuscripts collected in Fu's Shuangjianlou (Hongnong Yang's edition, Hongzhi 18th edition) Year manuscripts, Wu Kuan Cong Shu Tang manuscripts), as well as the remaining 91 volumes of the Ming manuscripts in the Hanfen Tower and the 18 volumes of the Ming manuscripts in the Ruian Yuhai Tower were collated and compiled into books in the 16th year of the Republic of China (1927) by the Shanghai Commercial Press. The 100-volume edition printed and published by the library, commonly known as the Hanfenlou 100-volume edition, is also the main edition used by scholars today for textual research and research; the second is the 120-volume edition re-edited by Tao Jue from Shunzhi of the Qing Dynasty, commonly known as the Wan edition. Weishantang version. In 1986, the Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House published the above two works together with "Shuo Yong Xu" and more than 100,000 words of the Hanfenlou version of the 25 volumes copied by Mr. Zhang Zongxiang using Xiuning Wang Jiqing's Ming manuscripts. It is called It is called "Three Kinds of Shuo Yong", which can be said to be the complete collection of "Shuo Yong". The publication description of the book says: "So far, the three types of content included in "Shuo Yong", taken together, are more than those recorded in "Zhongshu Zonglu". Although it has not yet been dared to be called a complete collection, at present, it is almost Close.
"The 100-volume manuscript of "Shuo Yong" collected by Niu Shixi, a bibliophile in the Ming Dynasty, is now in the Beijing Library. Yao also bought it and kept it in the Jiufeng Library in Huangyan, and added the preface to the Ming manuscript "Shuo Yong" in the Jigu Pavilion. . It was purchased by Wang Yongni (zishang, Liutan) of Huangyan during Tongzhi period. During the Republic of China, Wang Zhouyao (xingyuan, Meibo, Mo'an) purchased it and kept it in Jiufeng Library of Huangyan. In the 25th year of the Republic of China ( 1936) was exhibited at the "Zhejiang Document Exhibition" in Hangzhou. In the early years of the founding of the People's Republic of China, Mr. Xiang Shiyuan collected and collected it at the Taizhou District Cultural Relics Management Committee (now Linhai Municipal Museum). This book is now one of the rare books in Linhai Municipal Museum. This book has sixty volumes and twenty volumes. The beginning of the volume has a preface by Yang Weizhen, which reads: "90% of Tiantai Tao Jun's historical biography was collected from the classics and history, and it was sent down to Baishi's miscellaneous works by Qian Yu's family. It was compiled into sixty volumes, with more than tens of thousands of books. The article is called "Shuo Yong" and the end of the preface is signed "On the second day of autumn and September of Zheng Xinchou (21st year - 1361)". This is consistent with Yang's preface published in the Hanfenlou edition. "Compiled into one hundred volumes" are very different. The twentieth volume of the book was proofread by Mao Zedong with a red pen, and he wrote a short postscript at the end of the volume: "This version of "Shuo Yong" is very different from the Shixing version, and the details are not specified. The twenty-volume "Chicken Ribs" is full of errors and is almost unreadable. I have a handwritten copy by Wang Yuanbo of the Yuan Dynasty in my family. I took it and corrected it to the right. However, there are still many omissions and I can't eliminate them all. On the four days before the Double Ninth Festival (the 49th year of Kangxi - 1710), Yushan Mao Keshi, who was seventy-one years old, had a long text and red seal of "Yu Shan Mao Ke's Hand School" (it is the first page of the volume). Also has this seal). On the first page of each volume are the inscriptions "Ma Yutang Seal" and inscriptions "Wat Zhai Collection", and on the first and last pages of each volume are the inscriptions "Seal of the Collection of Huangyan Jiufeng Library". The title page of the first volume is stamped with the seal of Zhu Wen "on display at the Zhejiang Provincial Document Exhibition in the 25th year of the Republic of China". Wang Zhouyao also edited part of it, and there is also a postscript by Zhu after the title of the volume). ", all the pieces of furniture are called one hundred volumes, but Du'ang's "San Yu Zuo Bi" is called seventy volumes. The last thirty volumes are the original books of "Baichuan Xuehai" written by Songjiang people when they were doubtfully printed. There are only seventy volumes left. The "Concise Catalog" refers to the original one hundred volumes, but thirty volumes were later lost. In the Hongzhi period, Yu Wenbo of Shanghai still added it to one hundred volumes. The present case: Yu's preface: "Shuo Yong". "One hundred volumes, Yu Chu has not been seen. Chenghua Xinchou borrowed it from Gong's family. There are many missing words, and some are repeated and merged" (author's note: this text is an excerpt). There is no "lost thirty volumes, It is said that only seventy volumes remain", and "sixty-three volumes have been compiled into Baichuan Xuehai". "Xuehai" is popular in the world and it is not suitable to be preserved here. It is too annoying to record, so it is compiled. Those who have equal importance will be deleted, those who should be combined will be merged, those who have corrupted words will be corrected, and those who are missing will be filled in, and they will still be compiled into one hundred. roll. "This is what Yu saw. There are missing words in the book. It is not a missing volume. The ones that have been read in "Xuehai" have been deleted. It is not based on the books in "Xuehai". It is exactly the opposite of Du Ang's theory. By the time of Tao Jue, Dinghai, Shunzhi Of the 120-volume editions compiled, more than 80 of them have been published in Xuehai. They are a combination of various books. It is neither the original Nancun edition nor the Yu family's edition. This edition only has 60 volumes and is based on ancient times. Comparing the 120 volumes of printed editions in the old collection of the pavilion, not only the number of volumes is different, but also the order. There are about 860 kinds of editions that are present in the edition but not in this edition. There are also about 860 types of editions that are present in this edition but not in this edition. There are more than 100 kinds, which must be Nancun's first draft, which was later copied by Baijuan'er. It has many typos and is almost unreadable. The first, fifth, and seventh volumes have been edited. , but it is also cursory, except that the 20th volume was edited by Mao Zijin, and there is a postscript. The book was collected by the Ma family from Anhui Province. It was acquired by the prefect of Wang Liutan in my hometown during Tongzhi. The remaining volume was purchased by Jiufeng. The outline is as follows. Right. Written by Wang Zhouyao in the sixth year of the Republic of China (1917), compiled by Tao Jue of Ming Dynasty. It was edited by Tao Zongyi, a Jinshi of Wanli. "Yan", as of the Yuan Dynasty, there were 527 complex copies of Ming Dynasty's theory and continuation. The abridgements are just like those of Zongyi and above. However, the simplicity is not clear, and there is still a lot of Song and Yuan theory. After the Long and Wan Dynasties, the movement was gradually declining, and the Taoism became more and more popular, and people talked about Zen Buddhism. If it doesn't work, it may be that the rhetoric becomes more and more dramatic along the lines of Qi and Liang. It is easy to write books, and the number of sketches is increasing day by day. Those who want to stand out from the crowd are no different. The collection of white reeds and yellow grasses is extremely redundant and has been lost to textual research, and the era is unknown. Che Ruoshui's "Beriberi Collection" is from the Song Dynasty, and Xian Yushu's "Jianzhi Pu" is from the Yuan Dynasty. It's a small flaw when it comes to the entrance.
----Published "Summary of the General Catalog of Siku" Book Catalog Beijing China Bookstore 1986 According to Hanfenlou November 1927 Edition Catalog: Volume 1 Jingzi French Volume 2 Classical Record Brief Chaoye Qianzai Magazine Hidden Cave Magazine Liangxi Manzhi Natural History Continuation of Natural History, Drama Talk Record, Dong Gao Miscellaneous Record, Mianshui Yan Talk Record, Beihu Record, Volume 3, Tan Lebeihu Record, Zhitian Record, Youming Record, Jishen Record, Guitian Record, Shi Liao Record, Tan Bin Record, Talk Record, Seeing and Hearing Record, This Wen Record Dong Xuan records Yunzhaiguang records Songchuang miscellaneous records Shogunate Yanxian records Donggao miscellaneous records Beishan records Jiangnan records Jiangnan bielu Jiangnan wild records Sanfu Juelu Xiaoxiang records Kuaiji dianlu Wu records Spirits and monsters Good and bad influence records Shuxuan records Three dynasties and holy affairs Record Collection Ancient Catalog Han Zhongxian's Farewell Record Four Dynasties Hearing and Seeing Record Bin Retired Record Real Guest Record Four Dynasties Wen Seeing Record Suiyin Man Record Shao Tao Record Ancient Hangzhou Sleepwalking Record Volume Four Mo'e Man Record Panyu Miscellaneous Notes Xijing Miscellaneous Notes Lushan Record Qingcheng Mountain Record Songgao Mountain Records of Huashan Mountain Records of Luofu Mountain Records of Western Expeditions Records of Northern Expeditions Records of Chengdu Ancient and Modern Records Dongfang Shuo Ji, Xian Ji, Qia Wen Ji, Dongguan Zhao Ji, Laoxuean Notes, Qiuchi Notes, Fengshi Wenjian Records, Laoxuean Notes, Sanmeng Notes, Since Jianyan Dynasty Miscellaneous Notes, Xizhai Talk Notes, Songchuang Miscellaneous Records, Laoxuean Continued Notes, Ancient Hangzhou Miscellaneous Notes Leisure Diary Luoyang Jialanji Volume Five Helin Yuluxi Mancong Xiaochang Shiyanzhi Family History Old News Collection One Volume Biography Miscellaneous Compilation Selected Discussions of Friends in Snow River Volume Six Readings Random Readings of Yan Yu in the Stone Forest Du Yang Miscellaneous Compilation of Chicken Ribs Compilation of Volume 7 of Guangzhi, excerpts from biographies of Xuanxuan Qu, Rong Mu's chat, Mu Shu's chat, Bao Yin's notes, Mengxi's writing, Pei Chu, Xuanke's talk, Guiyuan Cong's talk, Wei Hangji, Qian and Tang's legacy, Jilin's events, Volume 8 Yujian miscellaneous books. Ke Cong Shu Gui Er Ji Wei Luo Meng Liao Xin Hua Yu Hu Qing Hua Yimao Summer Vacation Record Ming Dao Magazine Song Mo Ji News and Ming Shu Lu Ting Facts Bao Pu Zhi Ya Tang Miscellaneous Copy Volume 9 Induction Sutra Jia Shi's Talk Record Sino-Korean Story Steps Guest Talks about Sword Blowing, Hearings and Seeings, Xixi Congyu Yu Shutang Poetry Talk, Lazy Zhenzi Record, Lengzhai Night Conversation, Sushui Record, Hearing and Scenery Record, Xiansu Miscellaneous Notes, Jianjie Record, Volume 10, Beginning of Things, Continuation of Things, Beginning, Volume 11, True Records of Yuquanzi, Miscellaneous Collection of Jinhuazi Chatting under the lamp, Qing Zun's Record of Yi, Lin, Volume 12, Yuesheng's copying, Ye Xue's Pai Pai Miscellaneous Talk, Dongxuan's Notes, Jiaofang's Notes, Beili Zhigong's Later Ear and Eyes, Dongtian, Qinglu's Collection, Volume 13, Painting Appraisal, Volume 14, Records of Maoting Guests The records of chats and chats are scanned and compiled, the miscellaneous records of travels, Jishen records, travel officials' records, Wen Jiyin's notes, the history of Chu, the 梼杌 shogunate, and the records of Yan Xian, the records of Bo Yi Zhi, Volume 15. On the Quality of Turtles on Fish Breeding by Kuang Qinjing, the Sutra of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty
Guangzhi Volume 16, Thirteen Utensils, Illustrations, Yunlin Shipu, Xuanhe Shipu, Yuyang Gongshipu, Volume 17, Xitong Record, Savage Gossips, Ai Rizhai Cong Chao Volume, Eighteen Tanzhai Bi, Heng Fu Xuan, Miscellaneous Records, Biji Manzhi Volume 19: The Book of Beating Horses, Miscellaneous Records of Suichang Mountain Woodcutter, Forgetting Records, Record of Words, Ganze Ballads, Tiewei Mountain Conversation, Records of Wu, Volume 20, Haoran Zhai Yi Copy, Haoran Zhai Audio-visual Notes, Audio-visual Notes, Confucianism, Public Discussions, Capital Chronicles, Xijing Miscellaneous Notes, Southern Tang Dynasty Different narratives of events, different records of Luozhong, different records, reading, foolish opinions, advocating for Zhibo, talking about Baoguang, recording Tongyin old talk, pipa record, Volume 21, Sui and Tang Dynasty Jiahua, Liu Binjiahua, Tianyinzi, Yang Wengong, talking about Yuanyunzhuang, more than 46 chapters, Wei Ju Listen to Yu San Liuxuan Miscellaneous Knowledge Barnyard History Boat Window Night Chat with Fishermen and Woodcutter Gossip Recorded in Yesterday’s Dream Recorded in Conjecture Volume 22 Qingbo Magazine Twenty-Four Miscellaneous Notes of Kong's History of Xiangshan Field Records of Blowing the Sword, Continued Record of the Mohist's Wielding the Rhinoceros, Continued by the Mohist's Wielding the Rhinoceros, Sensing Classes from Zhiyi's History of the Western Expeditions, Biyun Tao's Records, Ken's Record, Volume 25, Novel Collection of Extraordinary Records, Different Records of the Age of Jingchu Record of Tongpu, Beifeng Yangsha, Record of White Otter, Volume 26, Miscellaneous Records of Xuanzheng, Volume 26, Records of Luoyang Famous Gardens, Records of Luoyang Flowers and Trees, Volume 27, Records of Cloud Immortals, Records of Gao Zhai, Records of Shanfang, Essays of Three Dynasties and Wilderness, Volume 28, Bibliography of Suichutang Volume 29: Taoyuan Shouting, Dongpo Shouze Tanzhaitong, Bihu Miscellaneous Notes on the Court and the Wilderness, Danshan Miscellaneous Knowledge, Zhaode New Compilation, Yanxia Fangyan, Yutang Fengchen, Records of Family King Stories, Volume 30: Shu Road Expeditions, Comparisons, Junyong Records, Supplementary Notes Volume 31 Miscellaneous Notes of Yungu, Miscellaneous Notes of Ziwei, Hou Zelu's Art Garden, Zhe Dongzhai's Notes, Wenchang's Miscellaneous Notes, Talking about Yabu, Volume 32, Dunzhai's Leisure Tour, Milou's Notes, Haishan Notes, Zhao Feiyan's Biography, Zhao Feiyan's Farewell Biography, Miscellaneous Records of the Ming Emperor, Living in Groups, Explanation of Yiluzhang's Records, Volume Thirty-three Er Laotang Poems, Suihantang Poems, Mysterious Readings, Che Zhi, Yichun Letters, Collection of Paintings, Xiaoxiang Records, Sanshui Sketches, Volume Thirty-four, Spring and Ming Dynasty Retirement Records, Dynasty Affairs, Lintai Stories, Hao Wei Mysteries Compilation of records of ears and eyes, distinguishing doubts, records of records of Yuanling, records of different records, Volume 35 ■ Records of Guanlu, records of Qingtang, saving worries Zhai Poetry Talk ■Xi Poetry Talk Crab Brief Yunnan Chronicle Volume 37 Hui Pian Lu Hui Pian Yu Hua Heyuan Zhijuan Travel Record Wild History Qin Shu Class Collection Qing Miscellaneous Story Volume 38 Green Pearl Biography Mei Fei Biography Yang Taizhen's External Biography Re-edited Yanbei Lu Yi Wen Xuchuan said that the biography was recorded in volume 39, Hou Xiaolu was recorded in Tao Zhuxin's record, Zhenla customs were transferred to the jurisdiction, and volume 40 was discussed by friends. Cong Nanchuang's records were discussed in the three Chus. The new record was recorded by Shen Ziye. Records of Zhi Luan, Records of Wu Chuan, Records of Lanterns, Records of Old News, Volume 42, Records of Shan Shui Chun, Complete Works of Chunzhu Chronicles, Records of Spring Dreams, Volume 43, Records of Xuanjing Demonization, Records of Zhihuzi Miscellaneous Records, Mr. Lingyang’s Chinese Language Inventions, Principles, Intercourse, Events, Perceptions, Recordings, Poems, Remaining Words, Immortal Biographies, Immortal Biographies, Immortal Biographies, Immortal Biographies, Collection of Immortal Biographies, Volume 44, Rites, Fan Jingkang, Chao Ye, Qian Yan, Jianquan Diary, Liu Family's Old News Draft, Jianfu Bijue, Inverted Records, Emperor Yangdi's Opening of the River, Kuo Yi Zhi Jiu Sutra Reading Beishan Jiu Sutra Volume 45 Qian's Private Records Silent Notes Ping Chen Ji Xing Shu Ji Field Book Shu Shu Ji Zhu Volume 46 Song Chuang Miscellaneous Records Rui Guitang Xia Lu Mo Zi Zi Hua Zi Zeng Zi Yin Wen Zi Kong Cong Volume 47, Gongsun Longzi, Deng Xizi, Han Feizi, Volume 48, Yu Yuzi? A collection of poems recorded in the court, a talk about gold and jade, a journey to the south, old novels, and old news. Volume 50: Relics of Gui Hai and Yu Heng's Chronicles. Volume 51: Ancient and Modern Records of Yu. Diary. Old News of the Jin Gentry in Luoyang. Records of An Nan's Journey. Volume 52: The Northern Preparation for Xiaowu of the Han Dynasty. Story: Daguan Tea Theory, Difficulties, Xuezhai Miscellaneous Records, Volume 53, Gouxuan and Four Dynasties Hearings and Seeings, Volume 54, Wenzi Tongxuan Zhenjing, Beiyuan Record, Mengda Preparatory Record, Volume 55, Shengwu Personal Expedition Record, Volume 56 Anya Hall Volume 57 of the Drinking Order, The Whale's Back Yin, Volume 59, Notes from Gusu, Notes from Xuezhou, Miscellaneous Notes of the Great Industry, Volume 58, Chronicles of Jiangnan, Collection of Zixiaji, Volume 59, Volume 59 of Historical Records, French Volume, Sixty-Fiveth Generation New Comments Hidden One Chapter: Essentials for Tasting Tea, Xuanhe Beiyuan Tribute Tea Record, Beiyuan Bielu Volume 61, Qing Yilu Volume 62, Lanting Boyi, Wang's Orchid Spectrum, Volume 63, Jinzhang Orchid Spectrum, Orchid Spectrum, Austrian Law Volume Sixty-Four Ji Shan Lu, Continuation of Ji Shan Lu, Jing Xing Lu, Mantang Essays, Honest and Simple Notes
Yu Guan Qi Xia Yu Story of the Five Kingdoms The legacy of the Duke of Han and Wei The legacy of Duke Zheng of Han and Wei Volume 66: Wine Booklet, Bamboo Booklet, Continuation of Bamboo Music Book, Volume 67: Sun Gong’s Talks about Pingquan Mountain’s Residence in National History, Compilation of Chinese Music, Odes and Poems, Volume 68: Interpretation of Common Talks, Volume 69: Good at Seducing Civil Service Officials, Admonishing Han Mo Zhi Yingxue Cong Shuo continues Chicken Rib Gengxi Poetry Volume 70 Chrysanthemum Spectrum Shihu Chrysanthemum Spectrum History Laopu Chrysanthemum Spectrum Fancun Plum Spectrum Peony Honor and Disgrace Vegetable Recipe Mushroom Spectrum Bamboo Shoot Spectrum Peony Spectrum Begonia Spectrum Volume 71 Kangcangzi Guan Yinziwen Zhongzi Yangtze Guiguzi Volume 7 Twelve Yanzi, Laozi, Longcheng Record, Fa Tie Genealogy, Volume 73, Sword Record, Jingzhou Record, Yezhong Record, Yanggu Manglu, Unnamed Public Biography, Mo Yao, Southern Chu News, Tan Bin Record, Tan Miscellanies, Zhengao Volume 74, Dazhong Legacy Records of the Middle Qin Dynasty, Zhitian Records, Jiangnan Records, Discrimination of Confusion, Important Events, Chu Family's Posthumous Book, Volume 75, Su Family's Romance, Tanzhu Dongweizhi, Ji Zhi Collection, National History, Supplement to Qing Dynasty, Later Collection, Jin Luan Mi Records, Scholars' Records, Shuiheng Records, Ju Lu Dong Notes on watching memorials and hearings, notes on beginners, notes on Jiashen, notes on hearing and seeing, recent notes, notes on the banquet, Shilin Family Instructions, Vol. See Litchi Pu, Records of the Western Regions, Chicken Forest Records, Jinpo Heritage, Jinglong Wenguan Records, Volume 78, Luancheng Last Words, Sui Dynasty Records, Inkstone History, Duanxi Inkstone Collection, Fa Shuyuan Volume 79, Yutang Miscellaneous Notes, Wang Gong 46, Xichou Changyan, Haiyue Volume 80 of Famous Quotations: Yunlu Manchu, Copied Korean Poems, Collections of Collected Relics, Great Events, Beautiful Talks, Bihonger's Poems, Lv's Countryside Appointment to Present Ugly Collection of Woodcutter Talks, Volume 81: Xuezhai Xinbi Test Writing, Tea Record, Jiancha Water Record, Volume 82: Daoshanqing Volume 83: Poems and Tea Sutras in Houshan Volume 84: Baosheng Yaolu Qian Pu, Teachers and Friends Yayan Volume 85: Treatise on Dharma Protector Volume 86: Liao Chronicles, Jin Guozhi, Dongtian Blessed Land Volume 87: Southern Coward Tree Shape, Wu Xiatian Jiazhi Volume 88 of the Ancient Classics: Zhupo's Poetry and Gongfu's Poems and Ziwei's Poems and Sima Wengong's Poems and Coral Hook Poems, Volume 89: Introduction to Painting Curtains, Volume 90: Talks between Masters and Friends, Hanlin Zhisu's Book, Volume 91: The Theory of the Understanding of Kinds of Things The History of Wu Hou Xin Shu San Fu Huang Tu Meng Hua Lu Volume 92 Shu Duan Yu Qiao Qiao Duan Volume 93 State Lao Tan Yuan Chao's Hakka Language Volume 94 Houde Record Volume 95 Zhi Lin Bai Hu Tong De Lun Volume Ninety-six volumes of records of Yan Yiyi Mou, volume ninety-seven of Jinshan annals, Liaodong annals, ancient records, custom-made records of persuading good deeds, Yijian annals, divine monks' transmissions and effects, collections of volumes ninety-eight, Chinese ancient and modern annotations, prison turtles' appreciation of good deeds, imperial dynasty leiyuan, Hengpu quotations, Ding Jingong Talking about the ninety-nine volumes of Shu Pu's ancient and modern notes on China's ancient and modern volumes, the 100th volume before the final recording, the continuation of the previous volume, and the essays on Lun Heng