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Lu Paoquan
This spring
was originally a small pond with two small water eyes. The two clear springs
kept overflowing and flowed down the mountain day and night, attracting groups
of wild deer to come and drink. In the book of Xia Shenshu, a literary figure of
the Qing Dynasty, it is recorded that sucking Lu Spring, boiling new tea, and
kissing with sweet fragrance. Chinese literature has always been about
confrontation and contrast. There are two sisters springs in Zhaoyin Mountain.
There are deer running on the top and tigers running on the bottom. The deer
running spring is more respected for its "sweet and moist kisses", so Zhaoyin
Temple was once renamed "Luquan Temple".
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