I should have tasted all the famous wines in the world, but I love Mianzhu Daqu Chun. The original sentence comes from "Han Hai" written by Li Tiaoyuan in the Qing Dynasty.
During the Qianlong period of the Qing Dynasty, Li Tiaoyuan, a scholar of the Hanlin Academy, was from Luojiang, a neighboring county of Mianzhu. He also brought Mianzhu wine to Beijing. It is said that He Shen liked Mianzhu Daqu the most and often asked Li Tiaoyuan to give it to him. Li Tiaoyuan looked down on Heshen's character and was unwilling to give him the Daqu wine produced in Mianzhu, thus offending Heshen. Heshen accused Li Tiaoyuan of framing Li Tiaoyuan by instructing his subordinates to lie about the theft of gold and silver from the treasury because of Li Tiaoyuan's opposition to cheating in exams. , and finally Li Tiaoyuan was demoted home.
After Li Tiaoyuan returned home, he called Mianzhu Daqu "Mianzhu Qinglu Daqu Wine" in his book "Han Hai", and wrote a poem praising: "I have tasted all the famous wines in the world. But I love Mianzhu Daquchun. "It means I have drunk all the famous wines in the world, but I only like Mianzhu Daquchun."
The creative background of "Han Hai":
In 1772, during the Qianlong reign of the Qing Dynasty, the government rebuilt the "Yongle Dadian", collected missing books from all over the country, and opened the "Sikuquanshu" compilation and editing library, collecting books from all over the country. More than 13,000 rare ancient books are collected. At that time, Li Tiaoyuan served as Huifu, supervisor of the Hanlin Academy, and participated in the compilation of "Sikuquanshu". Taking advantage of this opportunity, he was able to borrow books from the imperial palace and hired people to copy many rare books, especially those from Bashu.
In order to preserve the books of Bashu, Li Tiaoyuan compiled the books he had collected and recorded over the years into a volume, called "Han Hai", and published it in the 49th year of Qianlong (1784).
The scale of "Hai Hai" is huge, with more than 160 kinds of books in total, compiled into 40 letters and 852 volumes. The content involves the Wei, Jin, Six Dynasties, Tang, Song, Yuan, Ming and Qing dynasties, including research results in history, archaeology, geography, agriculture, medicine, literature, dialects, phonology, folk customs, surnames, Sichuan opera, Sichuan cuisine, etc. It can be said that "Han Hai" is The total collection of albums by Sichuan scholars before the Qianlong reign of the Qing Dynasty can be called an encyclopedia of ancient Bashu culture.