Since then, after many meetings, Peng Ling presented the ancient books to Xin Deyong, a famous expert in ancient literature and a professor of history in Peking University, for review. The verification result agreed by Professor Xin. In 2006, Peng Ling took Xin Deyong's notebook beads to China Bookstore for public auction, but because there was no suitable buyer, the ancient manuscripts were auctioned off.
After the auction, Peng Ling took the manuscript and found Zhang Zhenduo, an expert in Tianjin ancient book edition. He roughly divided the tattered books into four parts: miscellaneous notes, epigraphy and calligraphy, the draft of Walking in the Garden and the manuscript of letters, and asked the master to frame them into books.
Peng Ling began word-for-word verification. Looking through Notes on Beads, he found that Qi Kun, Fei Xizhang, Shen Fu and other Qing Dynasty figures were mentioned in the article.
After checking these words one by one, Peng Ling was surprised to find that the transcript of Qian Yong's mission to Ryukyu in the 13th year of Jiaqing was probably the lost text of Shen Fu's Six Chapters of a Floating Life. There are 100 kilograms of books and materials on the Internet, and referring to the research results of Six Chapters of a Floating Life by Professor Cai Genxiang from the Institute of Economics of Kaohsiung Normal University in Taiwan Province, Peng Ling learned that Six Chapters of a Floating Life was published in the world after Shen Fu, but it was soon forgotten in the dust of history. Guangxu stumbled across it in Suzhou three years ago, but "six chapters were missing two". The so-called Six Chapters of a Floating Life, which was later circulated, was full of content, and the last two chapters were all forged, which made him more confident in his judgment.
Peng Ling went back and forth to the National Library to find a lot of information about Six Chapters of a Floating Life, and contacted a group of experts and scholars such as Cai Genxiang, trying to prove that more than 6,200 words copied were the contents of Zhongshan Calendar (formerly known as Ji), the fifth volume of Six Chapters of a Floating Life by Shen Fu.
12 On March 20th12, according to Peng Ling's discovery, People's Literature Publishing House published a new supplement, Six Chapters of a Floating Life. In the publication notes of the book, it is pointed out that fortunately, recently some collectors have discovered the manuscript of Zhu Zhu by Qian Yong, a famous scholar and calligrapher in Qing Dynasty who was contemporary with Shen Fu, and there are important documents about Shen Fuhe's Six Chapters of a Floating Life. In particular, the book Introduction to Ryukyu Kingdom is considered by many scholars to be the first draft of the lost Guo Hai Ji.
Shortly after the spring auction in 2006, Peng Ling received a phone call from a mysterious person, expressing his willingness to pay a high price for the transfer. With the help of experts, Peng Ling deepened his research on notebook beads. Professor Cai Genxiang, who is far away in Kaohsiung, Taiwan Province, actively supports Peng Ling's research while doing his own research.
In the process of textual research, a famous literature retrieval expert from China, who was engaged in word identification in the sensational dispute over Hong Kong's bequeathed pearls, served as a technical consultant and confirmed that the notebook pearls and the universally recognized calligraphy "Yousheng" were written by the same person. Experts also judged that Qian Yong and Shen Fu were contemporaries. He witnessed Six Chapters of a Floating Life and copied it.
With the deepening of research and textual research, the long-lost fifth draft of Six Chapters of a Floating Life, Guo Hai Ji, appeared in the note beads. Amazing discovery, in a short time, made this manuscript a treasure favored by Japanese collectors and even many people. In 2008, after many experts failed to buy commemorative beads at high prices, a mysterious collector said that Shen Fu, a fellow villager in Suzhou, was willing to pay 600,000 yuan for this book and offered to donate it to Suzhou Museum. But Peng Ling inquired in many ways, and Suzhou Museum didn't know about it at all. At the end of 2009, a Japanese collector also called Peng Ling, and the offer was as high as 6,543,800 yuan, which Peng Ling immediately refused.