In Qingzhou lived Master Feng, a man of considerable wealth, who on this particular day slaughtered a pig to entertain guests. After scalding and scraping the bristles, a line of script was revealed upon the pig's hide: "The Seventh Incarnation of Qin Hui."

When the pork was boiled, the stench that filled the air was so foul that no human could stomach it; it was ultimately discarded for the dogs. I wonder if even dogs would deign to eat the flesh of Qin Hui?

The people of Yidu say that Master Feng’s ancestor served as an official during the Song Dynasty and was persecuted by Qin Hui, which is why Master Feng held Marshal Yue Wumu in the highest esteem throughout his life. Beside the north street of Qingzhou city, he erected a Temple to King Yue. Within the temple stood effigies of Qin Hui and Wan, both depicted kneeling on the ground. Passersby who entered to pay their respects frequently pelted the two treacherous ministers with stones, and the temple’s incense offerings never ceased. (Wan is pronounced Mò Qí Xiè; Wan is the surname.)

Later, when the Qing forces campaigned in Yuqi, the descendants of the Feng family destroyed the effigy of Marshal Yue. Several li away stood a "Shrine to the Ancestral Mother," where the statues of the two villains were moved, forced to kneel morning and night facing the Mother Goddess. A hundred generations hence, this act will surely lead to the confusion between Auntie Du Shi and Lord Wu Zixu—is that not absurd? ("In Wenzhou, there was the childless Auntie Du Shi and the unmarried Lord Wu Zixu. The locals welcomed Auntie Du Shi to be matched with Lord Wu Zixu, housing them together in one temple. Who is Auntie Du Shi? She is Du Shiyi [Du Fu]. Who is Lord Wu Zixu? He is Wu Zixu. The ignorant common folk of antiquity, relying solely on phonetic similarities, mistook Du Shiyi for a woman and Wu Zixu for a bearded man, pairing them as a couple—a truly ridiculous mistake.")