1920, Liu Yong and Sun Liuchenggan built a library in Nanxun, Zhejiang Province, which was named "Jiayetang Library Building" because the Qing Emperor Puyi gave Kowloon a gold plaque. This building is large in scale and rich in books. The original library is integrated with the garden and is famous for its collection of ancient books. It is one of the famous private libraries in modern China. The owner of the library is a noble family who loves books. After the Revolution of 1911, he took advantage of the circulation of a large number of ancient books and bought a large number of books. He claimed that he spent 20 years, paid 300,000 yuan and got 60 thousands of books. In the heyday of the library, from 1925 to 1932, there were 155 versions of the Song and Yuan Dynasties, more than a thousand kinds of local chronicles, and many Ming editions and manuscripts, among which a large number were works of the Qing Dynasty and various historical collections. The library is famous not only for its collection of ancient books, but also for its block printing books. Many engraved books were banned by the Qing government and printed very well. Liu Chenggan became the richest private book collector in modern times.
But visitors can see at a glance that the Tibetan language on all the plaques in the library is missing two points (not strictly speaking), in short, some paintings are missing. So, I can't help asking, why? There is a saying that "if you count too much, you will be poor, and if you are full, you will decline." Books, in particular, are vast, and there are only a few books hidden, and hundreds of thousands of books are just a drop in the ocean. Therefore, from the plaque of the library, we read a book that all libraries in the world don't collect, which makes people think deeply and enlighten!
Can you understand this explanation?