UC-NRL.!:, itiit) ';l. ''4)'; s^ i^mi;. '^^B- 'r''""?l''' '1 '.'l .''" GIFT OF HORACE W. CARPENTJER -V CHINESE NOVELS, / CHINESE NOVELS< TRANSLATED FROM THE ORIGINALS; TO WHICH ARE ADDED PROVERBS AND MORAL MAXIMS, COLLECTED FROM THEIR CLASSICAL BOOKS AND OTHER SOURCES. THE WHOLE PREFACED BY OBSERVATIONS LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE OF CHINA. By JOHN FRANCIS DAVIS, F.R.S. LONDON: JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET. 1822. / M- {jA^-4iw +7-1 y If L. D ^ / / 1 % zz CONTENTS. Observations on the Language and Literature of Page China 1 The Shadow IN the Water 51-^lOfei The Twin Sisters 107 - f Ti The Three Dedicated Chambers 153 _-^iL Chinese Proverbs, &c 225 OBSERVATIONS LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE CHINA. Amidst the general progress which has been made by our countrymen in know- ledge, their advancement in subjects con- nected with the Chinese empire, and its literature, has been very inconsiderable. One is at a loss to account for the almost total ignorance, which previous to the em- bassy of Lord Macartney prevailed in this country, respecting a people with whom we carried on such large dealings, while the French, for nearly a century before^ B 2 LANGUAGE AND LITKRATUIIE had been prosecuting their researches Avith dihgence and success. It is not easy to explain this singular listlessness, by saying that the subject was devoid of interest, for whether we consider the extraordinary na- ture of the government of China, or the no less extraordinary structure of its language, it would seem that it had been necessary only to know that " such things were," in order to produce much industry in their in- vestigation. Those of our own nation, from whom the first information on these subjects was to have been expected, were, without doubt, the agents employed by us to superintend our aftairs in China. AVere it under no other consideration than that of policy, that these })ersons had rcgaidcd [\\v htiM'a- turc ol" that empire as ch'serving of notice, this consideration alone, a\ hen we remem- ber the magnitude of the conmiercial rtia- OF CHINA. J tions, which as long ago as the middle of the last century subsisted between the two countries, would seem sufficient to have given it an interest, fully adequate to in- duce research. But either the fancied, or the real difficulties of the language, or both together, eifectually prevented its acquisi- tion; besides which, the Chinese themselves were disposed to throw discouragements in the way. As it was necessary, however, that one of the parties at least should un- derstand sufficient of the language of the other, to facilitate their mutual intercourse, the Chinese were content to acquire as many words of English, as would barely serve the purposes of commerce ; and thus by degrees arose that base and disgusting jargon, which still continues to be spoken and understood at Canton. This, which was at first a consequence of our general ignorance of their tongue, is now the great B 2 4 LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE cause that tends to perpetuate it ; for most persons find it more convenient to avail themselves of such an imperfect and con- fined medium, than put themselves to the trouble of acquiring the language of the country. The natives themselves hand it down from generation to generation in a printed vocabulary, wherein the sounds of our words are imitated, as nearly as they can contrive it, by their own characters. Thus it was that little or no addition was made for years to our general stock of in- formation regardins; China ; and until the embassy of Lord INIacartney, an imperfect translation of a novel was the only speci- men of Chinese literature for which wc had to thank our own countrymen. 'J'hat em- bassy, however, had its full ellect in clear- ing away much of the obscurity which in- volved the subject, not only inunediately, through the personal observations ol those OF CHINA. who composed it, but also by its more re- mote tendency to awaken a general curi- osity, and a desire to know something con- cerning so singular a people. It is to the embassy, perhaps, that we may consider ourselves indebted for that valuable trans- lation of the Penal Code of China, whose author has an undisputed claim to the honour of being the first Englishman, who ever gave to his country a genuine specimen of the most interesting province of Chinese literature. The first thing needful in our inquiries was to divest the picture of all that false colouring, which had been so plentifully bestowed on it by the Romish missionaries, who for certain good reasons, stated by Sir Geo. Staunton in his elegant preface to the Penal Code, modified their most authentic accounts of China in such a way, as tended rather to mislead, than to inform; and it 6 LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE remained for the English to give the first correct account of a nation, whom they discovered to be neither perfectly wise, nor perfectly virtuous, but who were occa- sionally reduced to the necessity ot^Jioggiug integrity into their magistrates, and valour into their generals. If, however, the particular situation and prejudices of the Jesuits occasioned the information, which they transmitted to Eu- rope, to be on some points both scant}' and unfaithful, they must still have their due praise for being the first who told us any thing on the subject. We seem, in- deed, to be particularly indebted, lor our knowledge of China, to that zeal for spread- ing Christianity through the world, which has prompted so many to devote their lives to the cause; and it nmst be allowed, that to men who have such a purpose in view, there is at lirst sight sonjcthing peculiarly OF CHINA. 7 encouraging in the character of the Chinese. The bulk of the people have all that igno- rance of devoted attachment to old, and that indifference with regard to the intro- duction of new, religious doctrines, which usually attends a spirit of Polytheism, where the priesthood have little influence.* The general depravation of their moral character may be attributed to their total want of any thing like religious feeling. If it were left to their own choice, they would probably adopt the mere outward forms of Christianity with as much readi- ness, as the Romans enlisted the German deities among the gods of the Republic ; and the rapidity with which the missiona- ries advanced, as long as the}^ were unmo- lested by the government (though they, of * In India, the Priesthood have the greatest influence, and their jealousy is unbounded. 8 LANGUAGi: AND LITEKATUIJE course, made the total abandonment of old superstitions a sine qua non,) aftbrdcd abundant proof of this. At the same time, the acquisition of such ])lind and ignorant converts could hardly be considered as a gain to the cause of Christianity. When, however, the jealousy of the ruling power was once excited, the H^-^:^ ^^^' " l^e- ligion of the Cross," experienced the same persecution in the Chinese empire, that it had formerly met with in that of Rome, and was prohibited among the unlawful doctrines. There is the following mention of it in the seventh section of the Shing-yu, a book composed by the Emperor Yung- ching for the instruction of the people. *' The rcliiiioii oftlR* WCsliTii octnni, whiili reverences the Tion-chu, or Lord of Heaven, also appertains to the nund^cr ot" those OF CHINA. 9 which are not to be found in the ancient books; but as its followers are thoroughly acquainted with astronomical science, the government on that account employs them." The late unsettled state of the empire has greatly added to the rigour of the prohibi- tions against introducing Christianity, and it may be questioned whether any success would just now attend a violation of them. Several catholic priests have recently ob- tained the crown of martyrdom in the interior, and lost their heads in their zeal to make proselytes. But to return to our subject. One of the most effectual means of gaining an intimate knowledge of China, is by trans- lations from its popular literature, consist- ing principally of drama and novels. With reference to the former, the writer of this perfectly coincides in opinion with Sir G. Staunton, that " the dramatic works of the 10 LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE Chinese are certainly less calculated, on the whole, than their novels, to reward the labour of the translator. Too local and national to please as mere compositions, and their minute beauties of style and language necessarily in great measme lost in the translation, the remaining sources of interest are but slender. The dramatic dialogue drily rendered, and unaided by the talents of the actor, can convey, gene- rally speaking, no more than a very im- perfect outline of that interesting picture of life and manners, which, in their novels and romances, is filled up in its minutest details." It was with a similar partiality in faxour of the latter species of composition, that the tales, contained in tlu' prrsiMit \()linnc, were translated. Of the hrst of these, " The Shadow in the Water," it may be observed, that the principal incident, whence it de- rives its name, is pretty and natural, and OF CHINA. 11 that, in the conduct of the different persons, there is just what might be expected from human nature, in that particular state of society. Although the circumstance of the hero espousing two wives may certainly appear strange and uncouth to European readers, yet, as is justly observed in the Quarterly Review, " in the translations of foreign novels, it is information that is sought, and not a correspondency of feel- ing." Those very incidents constitute, as objects of curiosity, the chief value of such translations. The most remarkable circumstance in the second novel, " The Twin Sisters,"' (though there again, the hero espouses two wives,) is the power, which the distributor of pubhc justice seems to possess, of interfering in domestic matters of the first importance. However consistent such a power may be with Chinese notions of policy, it must cerr 12 LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE tainly appear to us strangely ill calculated to promote the happiness of society. The third and last tale was translated some years ago, and a very few copies were printed in China, under the title of the "Three dedi- cated Rooms/' It has also made its appear- ance, in fragments, through the medium of a periodical journal. The translator has always thought that in this, his first effort, he adhered too strictly to the Cliinese idiom, and that a less verbal rendering would not only make it more agreeable to the English reader, but also convey far better the spirit of the original. He has therefore subjected it to a complete revisal. As a picture of manners and opinions it is fully equal, if not superior, to the two which precede it. The Tales are succeeded by a collection ol' Proverbs and Moral Maxims, which were selected, (as the best, willi regard cillicr lo OF CHINA. 13 originality or point,) from a variety of sources. Judging of these by the Euro- pean standard, they deserve but Httle atten- tion in the abstract, and indeed their only claim to notice rests on their intimate con- nexion with national manners and ways of thinking. They cannot pretend to much novelty as ethical discoveries, for the day has long been passed (if it ever was) when Europe could have looked to the Chinese for instruction in moral science. The most surprising feature of such translations, from the languages of remote nations, consists occasionally in the curious resemblance, as well of the maxims themselves, as of the modes of illustrating them, to what we meet with nearer home; a resemblance Avhich is only to be accounted for, by the identity of human nature every where, as well as the similarity of situation, in which mankind all over the world are placed, in respect to 14 LANGUACi: AND LITERATUKK the motives and consequences of their moral actions. If it be true, that " the excellence of aphorisms consists, not so much in the expression of some rare or abstruse senti- ment, as in the comprehension of some ob- vious and useful truth in a few words,'' the language of the Chinese may be considered as admirably fitted for being manufactured into proverbs. It possesses from its pecu- liar structure a brevity and pointedness of expression, which no degree of care or pains can convey into a Translation, and which those only can feel who understand the original. A great deal of the beauty of a sentence arises often from the selection of the words, or from their mere collocation ; and if the intiuencc of such a])j)nrent tritlcs be allowed in a svllabic lan"uau;e, how nuich more in one which speaks, as the Chinese does, to the eye. or CHINA. 15 Of some particular notions contained in the following collection, it will readily be perceived that they are absurdly erroneous; and of others, that they are altogether re- pugnant to our ideas of religion, and of the administration of the universe. Indeed the government itself of China preaches to the people nothing better than a system of the most gross atheism ; and though it certainly tolerateslhe superstitions of Fo, and of Taou, (as a means, perhaps, of amusing, and en- gaging the attention of its subjects,) the tenets of those superstitions are stigmatized among the " impure doctrines,'' against the belief of which the nation is warned to guard itself, with especial caution, no less than against the belief of Christianity. The most popular modern work on prac- tical morality, among the Chinese, is the Shing-yu.* In it the maxims of their an- * Lately translated by the Rev. Mr. Milne of Malacca. 16 LANGUAGE AND LITERATtJRE cient sages are inculcated and explained, in subservience to the views of a despotic government; and it is a lasting monument, not only of the literary abilities^ but also of the political sagacity of its author, the third Emperor of the present Tartar dynasty. To derive the obligations of obedience to the government, and observance of the laws, from their own national works on policy and ethics, was the means best calculated to secure the submission of the Chinese to a dominion, which had so recently been im- posed on them by conquest, and to a yoke, which to this day, perhaps, has not ceased entirely to gall them. As the government of a family is well known to be the proto- type of political rule among this people, the principles of parental authority, ami of filial submission, are, as might be expected, carried to a most extravagant length in the above work ; and the duties on the one hand OF CHINA. 17 are exacted, without any provision as to a reciprocation on the other. It certainly is at first natural to suppose, that indepen- dently of that instinctive affection, or ^o^yvi, universally implanted in living creatures towards their offspring, (and which in brutes ceases with the necessity for its exertion,) that acquired love, which springs from the consciousness of securing affection by con- ferring benefits, would be a sufficient pledge for the performance of parental duties. But it would seem, in China, that the most en- dearing of human relations is not always a security against domestic tyranny, and the abuse of unlimited power; and this perhaps is aggravated, by the dominion not ceasing at a certain period, but continuing during the life of the parent. It might be some check to the caprice of cruelty to think, that a day must come, when the law would no longer be its abettor, and when that sub- 18 LANGUAGE AND LITERATUllK mission, which was now exacted by autho- rity, could only be looked for from grati- tude. The Chinese, though possessing a vague notion of a future state, in their doctrine of the transmigration of souls, and though they have in their language such an expression as " the Life to come," seem to be little in- fluenced, as to their moral conduct, by the hope of future rewards, or the dread of future punishments. In the inculcation of their maxims, their ^loralists appear to hope for proselytes, rather by pointing out the temporal and immediate profitableness of virtue, than by drawing the attention of their disciples so far as to a future state of exist- ence. This, indeed, is to he expected among a people, whose moral precejits de- rive none of their lorce from the dictates of Rehgion ; for where such sanctions do not present themselves, temporal srll'-intcrest must be resorted to, as the [)rimum mobile. OF CHINA. 19 The idolatrous superstitions of the Chinese have httle or no connexion with their mo- rahty, and indeed the ignorant and brutish character of the Priesthood would seem fully to entitle it to the contempt which it meets with from the mass of the people. The festivals and forms of their worship are made almost entirely subservient to pur- poses of show, and of public amusement, and a theatre is in most cases erected op- posite to a temple. Some of the rites, per- formed on such occasions, would not have disgraced the votaries of Cotytto.* Their Paganism has not been improved by them, since they received it from their western neio-hbours. The Greek and Roman mythology, if it was good for nothing else, formed the subject of their * Inultus ut tu riseris Cotyttia Vulgata, sacrum liberi Cupidinis ? — Hor. c 2 20 LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE finest poetry, painting, and sculpture ; and Lord Bacon calls it, " a soft whisper, from the Traditions of more ancient nations, con- veyed through the flutes of the Grecians," who possessed a wonderful power of giving a mould of ele2;ance and o;race to whatever passed through their hands. Chinese taste, on the contrary, is what most of us would pronounce vile and unseemly. It is regu- lated by principles diametrically opposite : for, with them, distortion is preferred to symmetry, and the tricks of art to the graces of nature; witness their small-footed women, their fat josses, their stunted garden plants — and a tremendous et cetera of mon- sters. The writer proceeds to conclude these general observations, by an examination of the aids, which have recently been atVordcd to the attainment of the Chinese language. Until very lately, the eliiof obstacle to this i OF CHINA. 21 Study has been the want of a good diction- ary. In the Chinese and Latin dictionaries of the Jesuits, the characters, or words, are certainly well selected, and consist of such as are in most common use. At the same time, these compilations are incomplete, as may be proved by the experience of any one who has had frequently to consult them. The few phrases and quotations, too, which are there inserted, from merely the sounds of the characters being written down in Eu- ropean orthography, instead of the charac- ters themselves, are rendered almost useless, until the student has attained a considerable degree of proficiency. These dictionaries have also been very scarce and expensive, as they were entirely manuscript, until M. de Guignes published his printed copy in France. His work is extremely well exe- cuted, and the characters, which w ere pre- pared by Fourmont more than half a ceur 22 LANGUAGE AND 1-lTEKATURE tury ago, distinctly and neatly cut. ]\I. de Guignes has done very little more, however, than to compile into one volume the contents of all the manuscript dictionaries which he could collect together, and as far as he has adhered strictly to them, his labours have been highly useful. A mistake, at the end of the Introduction, concerning S^l^/v. ^ 'm* proves that he was liable to error when he trusted to his own resources. It is not at first, perhaj^s, very easy to decide, what plan of a Chinese dictionary is the most desirable ; but the project of a mere Translation of that of Kang-hy would be quite absurd. .Vt the same time, the idea of a complete dictionary seems to re- quire, that almost all the characters or words, contained in that national work of China, should be inserted. In their aiicuiit Books, great numbers of woitls may be Ibund, which are now obsolete, or which or CHINA. 23 exist no where except in those Books: but yet it seems necessary that these should be noticed in a dictionary of the language. The Chinese value themselves not a little on the mere antiquity of their literature, and are disposed to look down with great contempt on the learning of all other nations. They have some books, such as the Ye-king, which are not now intelhgible, without a verbal comment, to natives themselves. If that may be apphed to a nation which is told of an individual, they may be compared to the man who wept in his old age, because he could not comprehend the productions of his youth : but if we should be inclined to laugh at them on this score, they may still assuQie grounds of superiority over us, with as much right, at least, as he who proudly said to his audience, " Gentlemen, I have forgotten more than you ever knew \" A student of Chinese should be somewhat 24 LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE acquainted with these Books, because there are frequent alkisions to them in modern writings : but to confine himself exclusively to them appears to be a downright loss of time. There are many excellent works of a later date, which may not only serve as better models of the style of the present day, but likewise convey far more infor- mation with regard to the present state of the Empire, and the character of the people; and, as has been before observed, multitudes of amusing Dramas and Novels, from which may be selected much curious matter. M hat we now want is a little practical knowledge of Chinese Literature, instead of speculative dissertations on the nature of the laniruaiie. That great desideratum, a complete Chinese dictionary, is at length in progress. In 1814, the Court of Directors of the East India Company, ^\i^h ihcir wonted libe- rality, supplied Dr. Morrison at Canton OF CHINA. 25 with every facility for carrying on this most desirable work. The Imperial Dictionary of Kang-hy forms its groundwork, and it contains every word to be found in the body of that great compilation. Instead, however, of being a mere translation of the same, a plan equally useless and absurd, with a reference to the use of the European student, this dictionary comprises, not only the definition of each word as given in Kang-hy and other dictionaries, but also quotations, in the Chinese character, from all the best ancient and modern works : as well as colloquial phrases, showing the sense of the more common words, as adopted in conversation. The first, and most volu- minous part, consists of the Chinese words Jirst, according to their arrangement in Kang-hy, under the roots. In the second part (which is now completed) they like- wise precede the English, but the arrange- 26 LANGUAGE AND LlTEllATURE ment is different, being according to their pronunciation in the European alphabetic system. The third, and last part, will be English and Chinese. In conveying the sounds of the charac- ters, or words, one could have wished that Dr. Morrison had retained the old system of the Jesuits, or as Fourmont calls it, the " Lusitanam, id est, receptam apud omnes pronunciationem.'' With all its defects, this system had the advantage of being generally understood by those who had turned their attention to Chinese subjects. But after all, this is a matter of secondary importance ; for by attending to the short rules at the commencement, for pronounc- ing the characters, all difliculty is done away. AV hat seems to be particularly dis- serving of notice, next to the learning and industry displayed in the work itselt", is the excellence of the Chinese metal types — the OF CHINA. 27 beauty of the principal characters, and the clearness and accuracy of the smaller ones employed in the illustrative phrases. The dictionary of Dr. Morrison has a powerful claim on the attention, not only of those who have a particular interest in the sub- ject, but likewise of all such as possess minds sufficiently enlarged to feel a gratifi- cation in the advancement of literature and knowledge in general. Another work of importance on the language of China, is the Clavis Sinica, or Chinese grammar of Dr. Marshman, pub- lished in Bengal in 1814. As the Pre- liminary Dissertation to the work involves some questions, on which the writer of this has a little to remark, it may be as well to consider it separately in the first place, and then to proceed to the grammar. The dissertation commences with obser- vations on the characters, and Dr. Marsh- 28 LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE man very justly says, " The specific dif- ference between the Chinese, and other languages, lies wholly in the principle on which the characters or words are formed ; these being formed in the latter by the union of the letters of the alphabet ; in the former, by the union of certain elementary characters, intended to represent the prin- cipal objects of sense." These elements he calls formatives, but proceeds, a little far- ther on, to mention certain other charac- ters, which he denominates primitives^ but of which, as far as the writer knows, the Chinese have no idea whatever. A considerable portion of the dissertation, which treats of the origin oi" the characters and the progress of the lauguage, was pub- lished in a former work of Dr. Marshman.* He mentions in it the six well known (li\ i- * The Luu-gnce. OF CHINA. 29 sions of the characters by the Chinese ; but appears to be under some mistake through- out, in thinking that the language was con- structed in pursuance of some pre-con- certed plan, of which these six classes formed the groundwork ; whereas the fact seems to be, that the classes themselves were instituted, long after the language had been already formed, with a view to arrange- ment and order. Next comes the above-mentioned system of primitives, concerning which Dr. Marsh- man observes, " The way in which this simplifies the language is too apparent to need pointing out.'' This, however, is a discovery which the Chinese scholars have not yet made in their own native tongue, and appears to the writer an innovation on an ancient and highly cultivated lan- guage, which (allowing that there were any foundation for it) is by no means calcu- 30 LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE lated to facilitate its acquisition. Let us proceed, however, to examine the grounds on which our author builds the reality and importance of his discovery. He says he long suspected the existence of Primitives, " which, like the Greek Pri- mitives, and the Sungskrit Dhatoos, form the bulk of the language by associating to themselves certain of the elements.'' He adds, that he observed in a manuscript Latin-Chinese (probably meaning to say Chinese-Latin) dictionary, which classed the characters according to their names, that in numerous instances one character was the root of ten or twelve others, each of which was formed from it by the addi- tion of a single dement." Now one would have supposed that this single element, as our author calls it, was itself the root, or radical part of the character, and it is cer- OF CHINA. 31 tain that the Chinese have this idea.* Dr. Marshman observed farther, that " the cha- racter thus formed generally took the name of the Primitive with some slight variation.'" If he means to say, that the portion of a character which is added to the root, (and which is generally to the right, as the root is generally to the left,) often gives its sound to the character which it contributes to form, he is indisputably right. An instance may be given in the word )^ ho " a river,'" which the Chinese themselves produce as a specimen of that class of characters, (one of the six above-mentioned) which they denominate ^^ ]^ " corresponding in sound." Here the root, which is y "water,"' evidently imparts its meaning to the com- pound, and^kho (which uncompounded is simply a particle) its sound. Noting this * In writing the same character variously, they never alter the root, but frequently the other parts. 32 LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE circumstance, as far as it sometimes ena- bles one to form a near guess at the sound of a character, is occasionally useful ; but even in this respect it is very fallacious, being by no means a general rule. For instance, in the common word ^g ^5/^ << to read," (root g "a word'') what resem- blance is there between its sound, and that of ^ ?}iae, which Dr. Marshman would call its Primitive? In another conunon word *^ gae, " to love," (of which the root <\^ " heart'' is in the middle) where is the resemblance between its sound, and the sound of its primitive, even if Dr. INIarsh- man can show that it has ani/ primitive, ac- cording to his own system ? Not satisfied, however, that these primi- tives shall merely give their sounds to the characters of the Chinese language, our author endeavours to prove tliat ihey im- part their f/icaning also. Now though the OF CHINA. 33 writer of this is sensible that the other com- ponent parts are sometimes combined with the root in giving its meaning to a charac- ter, he must enter his protest against this as a general rule. One of the principal proofs which Dr. Marshman has brought forward in favour of his position, is a list of com- pounds, which, in^ addition to their proper roots, have the character '^ in their com- position. He observes, " in perhaps the greater part of these, were the idea sug- gested by the primitive, (that of something current or freely flowing,) added to their various formatives, the meaning of the de- rivative would be nearly indicated ; as a man living freely may suggest the idea of a prodigal ; a tree's flourishing,'' that of a leaf; a jlowing mouth, tliat of verbosity,'' &c. To say nothing of the manner in which the sense of the words is here dis- torted, it is quite certain that ^ does not 34 LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE mean " something current or freely flow- ing/' but a generation, or an age of 30 years, being originall}' derived from ^ " ten/' thrice repeated, though classed in the Im- perial Dictionary under "— • " one." Other instances are produced equally inconclu- sive, and in particular a list of words in which ^§ " I myself,'' is a component part. Dr. Marshman thinks that " the general idea suggested by this primitive seems to be, that partial preference which the human mind naturally feels for itself, its own ex- ertions, its own property," cScc. though he is obliged to acknowledge that in many cases " the chain of connexion is scarcely discernible." The second part of the dissertation is on the sounds of the language, or the collocjuial medium, in contradistinction to the charac- ters, l^r. Marshman, p('rha])s, taki's unne- cessary pains to prove that liiis part of the OF CHINA. 35 language existed previously to the invention of the characters, since nations, as well as individuals, must obviously talk before they can write. He likewise observes, that it is not likely the compilers of the Imperial Dictionary should have introduced into the language, and given " as the true pronun- ciation of characters well known through- out the Empire, sounds never before heard by a Chinese ear."' This, indeed, is evident : they merely gave what they thought to be an improved method of expressing sounds which already existed. He then proceeds to lay down in detail the tables of initials and finals, as they are found in the first volume of the Imperial Dictionary ; as well as those wherein the said initials and finals are combined, to form all the monosyllables in the language. It certainly is an extraordinary fact that the Chinese should ever have adopted such D 2 36 LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE a roundabout method of expressing the sounds of their monosyllabic characters, as this of giving two, in order to enable the student to get at the sound of a third; when they had previously been accustomed to the much more obvious and simple plan of adducing a single character, of exactly the same sound as the one to be explained. Besides, one is naturally inclined to ask where they could have got a system of syl- labic spelling, of which nearly one third is evidently redundant ; a system, too, so anomalous to the general character and genius of the language, as to be scarcely- understood at this day by numbers of well educated Chinese. That the Chinese did not invent it themselves might at any time have been considered as morally certain ; l)Ut tVom which of tlie neiiihbourinir coun- tries, or "vvhen they got it, has not hitherto been (juite so clear. I)i\ xMorrisuii, in (he OF CHINA. 37 Introduction to his Dictionary, seems now to have answered both these questions in a manner perfectly satisfactory, and the fol- lowing is a short abstract of the interesting information which he gives on the subject, the whole of it derived from orioinal Chi- nese works, and substantiated by quota- tions. These works say, that the ^^^^^ ;^J^ " The system of the tones and that of the syllabic spelhng," were not known to the JM.{^ or literati of the Dynasty of Han. The mode of distinguishino; the four tones was first brought into general notice about the fifth century of our era, in a work published by a man named ;^^^- The syllabic spelling, or the system of initials and finals, was derived from the country W^ Fan, in the west, whence came the religion of F6 or Buddha, and was at first employed Vy.i£f^ ^^^ ^'^f' ||I 38 LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE " to give currency to the books of Fo in China." It was not however received into general use until the times of Tsy and Leang, or about the fifth century ; the tables of sounds, as given in Kang-hy, being introduced by :^J^ a priest of F6. After this, there can no longer be a doubt that the Sanscrit was the language from which the Chinese initials and finals were derived, though the system is proba- bly indebted, for its general adoption in the more modern dictionaries, to the counte- nance and partiality of the Tartar empe- rors, who, from the nature of their own syllabic spclhng, were much better able to understand its application than their Chi- nese subjects. Dr. Morrison remarks very justly that " what is said in the dictionary f^^ resj)ectingthe system, is still the lan- guage ol" tlu' Chinese. Its rules -avc nu- merous and cnibarrassing, aiul its meaning OF CHINA. 39 obscure. Every one is afraid of the diffi- culty, and rejects it, saying — ' of what use will this be to me in the pursuit of literary honours ?' " Dr. Marshman soon discovers that the system of initials and finals bears " a very surprising likeness to the sounds of the Sungskrit alphabet ;'' and is led by this similarity to question, " Did the Sungskrit system give birth to the Chinese colloquial medium, or did that, on the other hand, give birth to the Sungskrit alphabetic sys- tem ; or did they originate independently of each other?" In his discussion of these questions, it is difficult sometimes to dis- cover his meaning ; for by the " Chinese colloquial medium"" and " colloquial sys- tem," he seems at one time to designate the spoken language itself, and at another the mode of representing the sounds of that language. After all, however, he does not 40 LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE come to any decisive conclusion ; though it is probable that having read Dr. Morri- son's Introduction, he will b}^ this time have been satisfactorily assured on the sub- ject. The above observations are what chiefly occurred to the writer in his perusal of Dr. Marshman's Preliminary Dissertation. He shall conclude his remarks by a brief con- sideration of the Grammar. \\ ith respect to the general plan of the work, it is much to be regretted that Dr. Marshman should have adopted the measure of confming his observations and examples ahnost exclu- sively to the ancient books, and thus have rendered his work incomplete by neglecting the modern language of China. It is fair, however, to state his own reasons lor so doing. Although he nuMilions l'\)urniont*s Grannnar among the sources whence he derived his informalion, he observes thai OF CHINA. 41 Fourmonf s " supporting the grammatical positions which he has laid down, by sen- tences formed by himself, has greatly in- jured his work. Had he allowed himself to examine the best Chinese works for authorities, and stopped where he found himself unsupported by these, he would have obtained a far more accurate idea of the language, and would have added ex- ceedingly to the value of his work.'" Was Dr. Marshman not aware that Fourmont merely compiled the materials which were sent to him by the French mis- sionaries, and that he himself knew little or nothing of Chinese?* The colloquial ex- * When Fourmont received from Father Premare his Translation of the Orphan of Chaou, it was accompa- nied by the following dispensation from acknowledgment. " Si vous le jugiez digne de paroitre, vous pourriez le faire imprimer sous votre nom, sans craindre qu'on vous accuse de larcin ; puisque entre amis tout est commun, puisque je vous le donne, et puisque vous y aurez la 42 LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE amples were not made by him, but by the missionaries, and they surely were sufficient- ly good judges of correct Chinese. In fact, the only errors in Fourmont's granmiar consist, not in the phraseology of the ex- amples, for they are correct enough, but in the insertion, in many instances, of one character for another of the same sound, a mistake the most likely to be made by a man who did not understand the language. Dr. Marshman afterwards says — " if con- meilleure part, si vous vous donnez la peine de le revoir." Three excellent reasons, indeed ! — It is worth while to give what Fourmont himself adds, after he has quoted this portion of his obliging friend's letter, as it seems to prove that Du llalde acted rather dishoiu'stly in publish- ing the Orphan of Chaou in his own compilation respect- ing China. " Timuitne hoc Duhaldius? Scilicet, epistt)lii subdol^ interceptii, Libruni suum hacce uKa, et ad nu> dcstinata Tragico-conu'dia, oniare uon ibibitavil. Attpii eani, si A me petiisset, tledissem ultro : et si nu' de hn<:;iia Sinicii interrog'^sset, nujuuissem (puxpu', lu'tjue iniai:;i- nariis, ac onuiin6 falsis notis, pidcluuni dhul et nobile volunien conspurcari essem passus." OF CHINA. 43 versation differ from the style and idiom of the best writers, these variations are not the language; they may be given as col- loquial idioms, but they can have no place in a work which professes to embrace the whole of the language/^ According to this, then, the way to embrace the whole of the language is to give only a part of it. — In page 477 of his grammar, after having given an example of a modern phrase. Dr. Marshman adds — " such a combination of characters might be sought for in vain either in Confucius or Mung."' Why then has he confined his examples exclusively to quotations from them, and one or two more, the language of whom is now so ancient, as sometimes to require a verbal comment to make it intelligible to native Chinese? In consequence of his indiffe- rence for the modern language of China, he has omitted such phrases as 'T ^ 'f^j a 44 LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE superlative adverb, signifying " extremel}^ very/' and Jc^ ^ " about, about so much," used as an expression of doubt or uncertainty. These are phrases which are constantly occurring both in conversation and in books, phrases so perfectly idiomatic, that it is not easy to translate them literally, and which it is the business of a grammar, therefore, to put down and explain. The following are some of the mis-trans- lations of Chinese sentences, and other slight errors, which occur among the ex- amples given in the grammar. On the subject of comparison (p. 279.) Dr. Marshman (juotcs this sentence from the Lee-Khee A ^51 ^ ^ and trans- lates it thus: " He contiiiualiv reuards his own defects with less indulgence." He seems here to have mistaken the sense of the passage, which might have been ren- dered almost verbatim l)y, " \\v incurs OF CHINA. 45 faults more rarely/' It would still have answered his purpose as an example of comparison. In giving the following quotation from the Lun-yu, as an instance of the adverb determining the past tense of the verb to which it is joined, Dr. Marshman has made a considerable error, fn^-^^ ^_^ ^li.-tL^£^jh-fc. Our author translates it thus, " Formerly I saw him strenuously pressing forward, I never saw him stop."" He has mistaken the first word of the sentence, which signifies sorrow, and is the exclamation of Confucius on the loss of one of his disciples by death, for ^^ " formerly, in old times.'^ In fact there is no adverb of past time in the whole sen- tence, and the sense of the verb is here determined entirely by the context : it is therefore no example of his rule. The following insertion of one character 46 LANGUAGE AND LITERATURK for another of the same sound, is not noticed in the table of errata. ;^ S^i^ ^^ .^-^ " If a man's desire be really to- wards virtue, he indulges in no vice:'' for ^ read ;^. The following quotation (p. 263.) from the Four Books ^ fe^ >}& ;^ ^ "fr ^ Dr. Marshman renders thus, " In this period there may possibly arise a man eminent for virtue and wisdom." The word A2?, instead of may possibly^ means must positively. Under the head of Relatives (p. 334.) there is quoted a sentence from the Lun-yu, which is translated in this manner; " Ob- serve that which a man docs, mark that which he pursues; narrowly scrutinize that in which he delights." Here ^ij^jf ^ does not mean " mark that whicii he pur- sues," but — " observe the sources of his conduct." OF CHINA. 47 In the following quotation (p. SS6,) from the Shoo-king, Dr. Marshman seems to misapprehend the meaning of ^^. The sentence |]^ J|^3^ ^^ should be trans- lated thus; " Who could presume to decline yielding, or acknowledging inferiority, to thee?'' and not " Who dares not imitate thee?" as our author has it. In page 347, Dr. Marshman calls ^^ ^ ^ and ^.^ ^ (" I myself," and " thou thyself") possessive pronouns ; but surely these must be personal pronouns: for, if we are to be directed by the analogy of other languages, ego ipse was never classed in a Latin grammar among the possessives. Of such expressions as "^^jSpC " *'^^^" tions,'' and ;^ j|| " to fear" where two words or characters of the same import are joined together to convey one meaning. 48 LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE Dr. Marshman says (p. 515.) that " the reader must be left to form liis own opi- nion ; the Chinese unite the characters, but of the principle on which they are formed they say little more, than that one of the characters is often euphonic/' It has al- ways appeared to the writer of this, that in a monosyllabic language like the Chinese, it was found necessar}' in the above manner to combine two words together, conveying the same sense, and thus to form a dissyl- lable, with a view to being more readily understood in discourse. Hence these com- pound words are found to be more used in books, in proportion as the language of those books draws nearer to that of com- mon conversation. The Grammar is followed by an Appen- dix, containing a translation of the Ta-heo, (the first of the Tour Books) with the ori- OF CHINA. 49 ginal text. This is extremely well done, and highly creditable to Dr. Marshman's son, who, it appears, was the author. The only error seems to be in the translation of the title. Ta-heo does not mean " The im- portant doctrine,'' but " The study for grown persons." The Jesuits rendered it very well by " The school of adults." This translation is one of the best and most useful parts of the whole book, and it is to be hoped that productions similar to it will again issue from the press at Serampore. In the foregoing Observations, the writer begs to declaim any intention of violating those proper limits of candour and freedom, which are generally allowed, and ought always to be observed, in the investigation of such subjects ; and if his remarks have sometimes proceeded to minuteness, it is only because the importance of Dr. Marsh- E 50 LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE. man's book, as a grammatical work, seemed to give it a peculiar claim to such a con- sideration. Portland Place, ^bth Januati/, 1822. THE SHADOW IN THE WATER A TALE. TRANSLATED FROM THE CHINESE. " Fissus erat paries domui communis utrique : Hoc vitium primi sensistis amantes, Et voci fecistis iter, tiitasque per illud Murmure blauditiffi miuirao trausire solebant." Ovid. Metam, E 2 THE SHADOW IN THE WATER. SECTION I. During the reign of a certain Emperor of the Yuen dynasty, in a district of the pro- vince of Canton, there hved two persons of rank, who had retired from the toils of office. Their names were Too and Kwan ; the former of whom had obtained the highest hterary distinctions, and had exercised the office of an Inspector General of a Province; while Kwan had attained to a lower rank, and an inferior office. They had married two sisters, and as their common father-in- law had no son, they both lived with his family. The abilities and knowledge of these two persons were pretty equal, but 54 THE SHADOW their dispositions were very dissimilar. Kwan was of an austere and strict turn of mind; while Too possessed a natural in- clination towards pleasure and enjoyment. The dispositions of their wives were origi- nally similar; but after marriage, each of them conformed to that of her husband, and they gradually became estranged from one another. She who was accustomed to listen to grave discourse, could not endure to talk of pleasure; while the other, after being accustomed to pleasure, rejected whatever savoured of gravity and learning: and thus these two married couples, though they were related in the closest manner, yet, simply from the diversity of their inclina- tions, disagreed with each other, aiul tlay after day were involved in cjuarreis and disputes.* * An illusti'utioii of the Cliiiu'so iM:i\ii\i : " ^^ luii' views and dispositions agnc, tlir most distant \\ ill miiti' in IN THE WATER. 55 For a little while, they nevertheless con- tinued to live together, but after the death of the father and mother-in-law, they divi- ded the house into two parts, and separated them completely by means of a high wall, so as to prevent each being overlooked by the other. In the midst of the garden, however, were two Pavilions, or summer- houses, on each side of a small piece of water, and one of these fell to the share of each of the brothers-in-law. — As far as the dry ground went, a wall of separation was readily built ; but as the water was deep, it was not easy to lay the foundations in it. — However, the wall was still carried over, a little way above the water; for Kwan, al- though there was enough of the pond to have formed as effectual a barrier as the Vellow river itself, being jealous lest his friendship: Avhere they disagree, relations themselves will soon be at enmity." See Proverbs, &c. 56 THE SHADOW brother-in-law should be able to look into his domestic haunts, spared no trouble nor expense, but contrived, by means of stone pillars in the midst of the Basin, to carry over a wall, as a screen, from one side to the other. From this time, not only the male part of each family had no opportunity of seeing the females of the other, but even the men themselves did not meet above once in a year. Too had a son, whom he named Chin- seng, and Kwan a daughter, whom he called Yu-kiuen. They were both very nearly of an age, and were so like each other in the face, as to resemble two impressions of the same seal. Their mothers, being sisters, were very much alike, and were, besides, very handsome; nor did their childriMi de- generate from them in this res])ecl. W hile they still rode about on the backs ot" their IN THE WATER. 5? nurses,* (wliich was previous to the sepa- ration of the famihesj) it was not easy to discover which was the pearl, and which the gem.-j- Tlie lady of Too sometimes took Yu-kiuen into her arms, and treated her as her son; and sometimes the wife of Kwan placed Chin-seng by her side to sleep, as if he had been her daughter; and this became a frequent custom with them. It is said, that the faces and figures of children are very much influenced by their nurses : which perhaps arises from the con- nection between the milk and the blood. While they were together, being as yet infants, and without knowledge, this pair were unconscious of their resemblance to each other : but after the separation of the two houses, when they were old enough to * The Chinese mode of carrymg children. + In alhision to the Cliinese names, which respectively have these meanings. 58 THE SHADOW have their heads dressed accordino- to the different fashions of the two sexes, they heard people talking about this resemblance : their curiosity was raised, and they wished for an opportunity of making the comparison, to see if what people said was true. But they were divided as completely as the north from the south, and there was no possibility of meeting. After the lapse of a few years, they both of them began un consciously^ to make the same reflections on this subject. After admiring themselves in the mirror, they would each exclaim, " Surely people must look upon me as the handsomest person in the world : there cannot possibly bo any one comparable to me!" — These thoughts tended to give each of them a feeling of jea- lousy towards tlie other, ratlier than ol Io\o: for they were both very unwilling to allow the claim of superior beauty. They little IN THE WATER. 59 thought that this mutual feehng of jealousy would afterwards produce the events which it did, and that their adventures would be converted into a pleasant story. Yu-kiuen, being a female, could not go over to visit her cousin, though she very much wished it. Chin-seng, however, being of the opposite sex, said to himself, " The quarrels of our parents do not concern us, their children: then let me go over occa- sionall}^ and by that means preserve the feelings of relationship. If our mothers may see each other, are their children to be totally debarred V — So saying, he broke through the old custom, and went over to pay a visit. To his surprise, however, his uncle, as if being aware of it, had already pasted up a prohibition in large characters, to the following effect : " No relations are allowed to come in here, as it is thought expedient to exclude them. All are desired 60 THE SHADOW to pay attention to tliis, whatever ma}' be their degree of kindred." — When Chin-seng saw this, he stopped immediately, and did not venture to go farther. He saw Kwan, however, and requested him to ask his aunt and cousin to come out and see him. Kwan only called his wife, and would not say a word about his daughter. When Chin-seng again hinted her to him, he pretended to be deaf, or ignorant of his meaning, and gave no answer. Chin-seng, seeing his determi- nation, did not venture to press him farther, but after sitting some time, took his leave.* From this time, both Chin-seng and Yu- kiuen gave up their childish curiosity, and knowing that they could not vcrifv the re- ports which they heard, did not care any * Here follows a long speech iVoiii Kwan to his witV, about his reasons for keeping his nepheu at a distanie, the real motive, perhaps, being his emnitv to his broilRi- in-law. IN THE WATER. 6l- thing more about the matter, but became quite indifferent as to whether the resem- blance existed or not. It seemed, however, one day, by a strange chance, that fate was determined to bring them together; and that they, who could not contrive to meet on dry ground, should view each other by the mutual reflection of their images in the transparent wave. It happened, about the middle of summer, when the heat was very oppressive, that this young gentleman and lady both came to the summer-houses at the same time, for the purpose of enjoying the cool air. There being but little wind, the face of the water was unrufiled, and the two pavilions were clearly reflected in it. As Yu-kiuen Avas gazing on the water, she started on a sudden and exclaimed, " How happens it that my shadow makes its appearance on the oppo- site side, while I myself am on this! — This 6^ THE SHADOW surely must be some unlucky prodigy ?" — After a little consideration, however, she changed her opinion, and found out that this shadow must be the reflected figure of her cousin, who, being without his cap, was to all appearances a female; and from this circumstance, in fact, arose her mistake. She then regarded it attentively, and ac- knowledged that it was indeed the very image of herself, and that there w as hardly the least diflerence between them. Being thus compelled to give up the exclusive claim to good looks, she began to have a sort of fellow-feeling for what so nearly resembled herself, and by degrees to feel resentment against the i)arents ^\ ho could separate such near relalions. Chin-seng, as he sat and leaned against the rails, also caught a sigh I of (he letlec- tion on ihc opposite side, and l)eg;in to dance about with Joy. lie ^Irained his IN THE WATER. 63 eyes, and examined it awhile attentively, and was then conscious that what people had said was very true, and that he was not to be compared with his cousin. His pas- sion being greater than his discretion, he called out to the shadow, saying, "Are you not Yu-kiuen ? Yes, you are the counter- part of myself! What should prevent our meeting, and becoming companions for life ?" As he spoke, he extended his two arms towards the water, as if to lift out the object. Yu-Kiuen, who heard and saw this, felt an increase of the regard which she had already conceived for him, and would will- ingly have returned these signals : but she was afraid of the consequences if discovered, and having as yet never uttered or done any thing contrary to rule, felt a natural impediment. She therefore merely con- veyed the sentiments of her heart in a smile. 64 THE SHADOW Chin-seng, who was exactly like his father in all respects, knew very well, that, in order to discover if a woman was favourably dis- posed towards you, it was only necessary to observe if she smiled : should she but extend her lips in a smile, it was a good omen. The love-knot was already tied between these two, through the medium of their shadows. From this time, they came regularly every day to the same place, to avoid the heat; nor would they permit any of their attendants to come with them ; but j^referred sitting there alone, that they might l(^an over the rails, and converse with each other's sha- dows in the water. On these occasions, however, Chin-seng had most of the con- versation to himself; and the lady only made use of the lan^ua«2;e of her hands to convey her sentiments ; lor she was afraid, that should she speak, jiiuI \\vv fatlur and motlur hear her, she might not only be ex- - IN THE WATER. 65 posed to severe chastisement, but even her hfe might be endangered. In this first section has been related only the intercourse between the two shadows : in the next, you will find what happened after the originals had met. SECTION II. The two lovers, although from the first rencontre they daily conversed with each other's shadows, were unfortunately still separated by a high wall, which prevented their personally meeting. It happened one day that Yu-kiuen, in consequence of dis- turbed sleep, had risen rather late, and by the time she was dressed, it was already about ten o'clock. When she went to her summer-house, she could not see Chin- seng's shadow in the water: but said to 6& THE SHADOW herself, *' He must have waited here until he saw that I was not coming, and then have gone away/' Upon turning round, how- ever, she saw, to her great astonishment, that the shadow was changed into the substance, which stood by her side, and with extended arms essayed to salute her. The fact was, that Chin-seng, being determined upon a meeting, had seized the opportunity of her non-arrival to get across the water, and hide himself in a nook, from whence, as soon as she came, he could sally out. Yu- kiuen was a timorous creature, and as she was before fearful lest the slightest whisper should betray them, how nuu*h greater was her terror now, lest, in the face of open tlay, she should be found in company with a young man ! \\ ith a suddcMi cxclamalion, she liew into the house, and for four or five days did not dare to go to llu> j)avilion. Chin-seng, seeing her thus cry out and run IN THE WATER. 67 away, had been in no less alarm himself: he turned about instantly, jumped into the water, and got over to the other side. Yu- kiuen's hasty retreat was partly caused by sudden fright, and partly by the dread of discovery ; but she had no desire to break off the communication with him. After a little time, she began to repent of her pre- cipitation. She wrote down a few verses, and enclosing them in a flower, rolled the whole up in one of the large leaves of the water lily,* to preserve it from wet. When she next saw Chin-seng's shadow, she threw the roll into the water, and called out to him to take it up. As soon as he heard her, he ran down joyfully from the summer-house, and took up the roll, in which he found the verses, of which the purport was, " That the troubled face of the water was the * Nymphaea nelumbo. F 2 68 THE SHADOW image of her mind: that she had been greatly surprised by his coming over to that side ; but that in running away from him with such haste, she had been prompted only by the fear of discovery and punish- ment/' When Ching-seng had read this, he was delighted beyond measure, and speedily writing some verses in reply, placed them in the roll, and threw them across. In these he observed that " their present mode of communication was nothino^ more than gathering flowers in a dream; and that they must endeavour to make it more un- fettered, as well as more intimate for the future." Having perused this, Yu-kiuen was immediately aware that he Mas deter- mined to come over at all hazartls, ]c[ w liat would hap})en, aiul that it must certainly end in some terrible catastrophe. Slic ihi ic- fore wrote him back one or Inno lines, in Avhich she said, " that his first adveii- IN THE WATER. 69 ture had ended in nothins; worse than a severe fright on her part, but she could not tell what might be the consequence of another visit. That /jer father was not like his^ but would certainly put them both to death : and that therefore he ought to be considerate and prudent.*' Chin-seng, finding that she gave him this de- termined answer, did not v^enture to repeat his former words, but wrote back a formal proposal of marriage, in which " he be- wailed the unhappy circumstances which at present opposed their union ; but advised that they should wait to see how things turned out, and seize some more favourable opportunity. He only stayed for one word in reply, to render inviolable their contract for life.'' Yu-kiuen was not only set at ease by this, but readily consented to his proposal, and answered him in a few lines, in which she expressed her willingness, and 70 THE SHADOW declared " that she considered herself as devoted to him alone, and that death only should absolve them from this vow, which was made in the face of heaven." Chin- seng, on the receipt of this answer, was greatly rejoiced, as well as consoled for the misery of separation. From this time, he every day had some conversation with the shadow, with the ultimate view of obtaining the substance. He was constantly writing verses, of which the " shadow in the water" was always the burthen. In about six months, he had composed a little poem, which he called, " The Rencontre of the Shadows," and which, having left it open upon his table, his father and mother chanced to see. They discovered by this, that he had not degenerated from his parents, but that he resembled his lather in the chrection of his stuthes, and was likely to realise his mother's wishes. They IN THE WATER. 71 felt much rejoiced, and were desirous to form a suitable match for him. They thought of Kwan, but were apprehensive that he was too cross-grained to acquiesce in what tended to the good of others. There was a person named Loo-kung, of the same rank and standing as Kwan, who had filled some subordinate offices, but was now, like Kwan, unemployed. He was of a dis- position which was inclined both to learning and enjoyment, and since he partook equally of the tastes of Too and of Kwan, it followed naturally that he should be very intimate with both of them. After consult- ing with his wife. Too determined that this person was the most proper to conduct the negociation. He therefore Avent in person to Loo-kung's house, to ask the favour of his mediation, saying " that as his brother- in-law and himself had for some time been at variance, he hoped his friend would act 72 THE SHADOW the part of a peace-maker, and endeavour to restore their former union ; that the pro- posal of the match might then be success- ful." Loo-kung replied, that " since they were such near connexions, it was highly requisite that they should be good friends : and that he would use his utmost endea- vours on the occasion/' Loo-kung, soon after, had an interview with Kwan. He commenced by asking him his daughter's age ; and whether she had yet been betrothed to any one. He then gradually introduced the subject with which he had been entrusted by Too. When he had fully understood him, Kwan smiled without returning any answer, but with a pencil, which he held in his hand, wrote down a few lines on the table at which they were sitting, to the lollowing eftect : " Since the disagreement and en- mily have so long existed, it is not an easy IN THE WATER. 73 matter to effect even a reconciliation : but to think of marriage is little better than a dream/' Loo-kung, seeing how he received the proposal, knew that it was useless to press him farther ; and therefore said nothing more on the subject, but went away to in- form Too. He merely told the latter that Kwan had obstinately refused his consent : but suppressed the exact words which he had written down on the table. Too and his wife upon this gave up the idea entirely, and began to look out for another match for their son. They recollected that Loo- kung himself had an adopted daughter, named Kin-yun, who in respect to both her mental and personal qualities was in no- wise inferior to Yu-kiuen. They therefore engaged a person to go over and propose the match. Loo-kung said in reply, that marriage being a thing of great moment, it 74 THE SHADOW was not proper to be guided by one's wishes alone, but that the *Pa-tse (eight charac- ters) on both sides should be compared together. If, on comparing these, it ap- peared that the combinations did not por- tend any thing unfortunate, the match might take place. Too then took his son's Pa-tse, and sent them to Loo-kung. As soon as the latter had looked at them, he was greatly astonished, for it appeared that Chin-seng's eight characters were precisely those of Kin-yun ; that these two were born in the same hour, of the same day, of the same month, of the same year. He then exclaimed, " It plainly appears, from this, that the malch is ordained by heaven, and therefore it no lonu;er rests with man to o])pose it. There can be no more doubts * Eight characters, bigiiifjing the u-ar, inuiith. tl;i\ ami hour, in whuli ihi' pir.soii was burn — a .sort of jiiduial astrology. IN THE WATER. 75 on the subject." The negotiator of the marriage returned with this answer to Too and his wife, who rejoiced very much, and, without saying any thing to their son, con- cluded the match. But how happened it that Chin-seng, who was very quick and intelhgent, should not discover what his father and mother had been doing for him? The truth is, that from the first moment in which he saw Yu-kiuen, this young gentleman seemed to have transferred his very soul to the shadow in the water, and became to all appear- ances more dead than alive. If he was called, he gave no reply ; if he was ques- tioned, he returned no answer. He would do nothing but sit in the summer-house and lean against the rails : nor would he allow a single person to come near him. In this way, he could hear nothing about the con- cerns of his family ; and even his own mar- 76 THE SHADOW riage was agreed upon for some time with- out his knowing any thing about it. By chance, however, Yu-kiuen heard somebody mention it, and began immedi- ately to fear that he had broken his faitli with her. She wrote him a most cutting letter, expressing her resentment, and by this means Chin-seng became acquainted with the fact. He went immediately to his father and mother, and as soon as he un- derstood the circumstances, began to cry out like a fro ward child, and to entreat them, as they valued his life, to break olf the match. lie was enraged, too, with Loo- kung, and began to abuse him, saying, " the refusal of my uncle's consent is merely a fabrication of his ; and it is plain that he himself, wanting me for a son-in-law, and unwilling to give me up, has contri\tHl tliis scheme. If any one else had been the negolialor, my wishes would have been IN THE WATER. 77 accomplished by this time." He then called him by all sorts of names, and abused him heartily. Too would have corrected his son for this, but having formerly indulged him, he could not now exert his authority. He knew also that Chin-seng's disposition was the copy of his own ; and since he could not restrain his own passions, how should he govern those of his son ? He therefore let him have his own way entirely ; but advised him to moderate his grief, and let him manage the affair. Chin-sen o; was for fixing a certain time, within which the one match should be broken off, and the other concluded ; and vowed, that were he disappointed in this, he would find out a short way of cutting off his family's pos- terity.* Poor Too had no help for it, but was obliged to go as a self-condemnedf * That is, he would kill himself, i* Literally, " carrying on his head the instrument of his punishment." 78 THE SHADOW criminal to Loo-kuno;. He first entreated pardon for his mistake, and then informed him of his son's determination. Loo-kung, when he had heard him, changed colour, and exclaimed, " What sort of person do you take me to be, that you may thus agree with me upon a match, and then break it off again ? When my friends hear of it, how will they not ridicule and despise me? Since your son is averse from an alliance with my family, he must have some prior engagement : pray inform me who the person may be/' Too answered, " His mind is fixed upon the daughter of Kwan. Though he knows that he cannot obtain her, he yet wishes to retain a shadow of hope, and await the vicissitudes of fortune." When Loo-kung heard this, he smiled to himself, and then read to Too the strong answer which Kwan had written down, when the match was proposed to him. IN THE WATER. 79^ Upon this, Too could not refrain from weeping violently, and exclaiming with a deep sigh, " If it be thus, my poor son will certainly die, and I shall become a child- less ghost V Kwan replied, " Why so ? Your son has no doubt had some inter- course with the lady, and contracted an inviolable engagement/' Too answered, " Nothing of consequence has passed be- tween them, though they have had some slight intercourse with one another. With- out having ever met, they have for half- a-year been enamoured — of one another's shadows; and the mutual feeling is now so strong, that it is impossible to con- quer it. How can j^ou assist me, my friend V So saying, he presented to Loo- kung his son's poetical composition on the subject. When he had read it, the latter showed some anger, but soon laughed, and said, " Although this is a vexatious affair, 80 THE SHADOW it still constitutes a very pleasant story. Making love by shadows is a thing which has never happened before ; and the tale will certainly be transmitted to posterity. The parents, however, should not have let it come to this ; but since it has come to this, the sooner it is settled the better. Let it all alone to me ; and I will contrive to bring it to a happy conclusion. It is better that my (adopted) daughter should be dis- appointed, and encounter the disgrace of having been rejected : I will hnd out ano- ther match for her." Too said, that " if he did this, he should be for ever obliged to him '" and going home, he informed his son of the conversation. Chin-seng, from being very sorrowful, became extremely happy, and not only ceased to abuse Loo- kung, but began to sing his j)raises : and pressed his father and molhor to urge him to conclude the alVair. lie himself likewise IN THE WATER. Sh went over in person, and was advised by Loo-kung, that " as this business could not be happily effected without time, it was better for him to attend a little longer to his studies, and give up his thoughts of the union for the present/' From this time Loo-kung at once sought another son-in- law for himself, and laboured to promote the cause of Chin-seng. However, he would not mention the affair of the refusal before his family ; first, because he was afraid of people's ridicule, and secondly, because he feared that his daughter might find out what she had lost, and evil conse- quences ensue. He asserted, on the con- trary, that his intended son-in-law had not answered his wishes, and that he himself had broken off the match, thinking it was disadvantageous. He was not aware that his daughter would contrive to elicit the real truth out of the feigned story. G 82 THE SHADOW Kin-yun had already discovered that Chin-seng's eight characters were the same as her own. She had heard, too, that her intended husband was extremely handsome : and she congratulated herself on these cir- cumstances, and hoped for an early con- clusion of the marriage. AVhen therefore she suddenly learned that the match was given up, she was very much disturbed : and her maids also expressed their resent- ment against their master, for " breaking off so excellent a marriage, when it was already determined upon. When his in- tended son-in-law, too, came to his house on the subject, he had persisted in refusing him. Since he refused him, he ought at least to have broken off all further inter- course ; why then did he assist him in his pursuit of another object, and thus throw away so excellent a son-in-law ?" Kin-yun hearing this, was very much incensed, and IN THE WATER. 83 said to herself, " I am only his adopted daughter, and therefore he does not care what befalls me: if I were his own child, he would never have treated me in this manner !" After some days, her agitation of mind ended in disorder of body. It is very truly said, that " there is no grief like the grief that does not speak:* there is no pain like that which seeks not relief." She would not communicate her troubles to any one, but buried them within her own breast. The consequence was that they became intolerable, and nothing would cure her malady. That a gentleman should fly from a lady, and a lady be in despair for a gen- tleman, is a case which never happened before since the beo-innins: of the world! Our readers may stop here, and consider * " The grief that does not speak Whispers the o'er fraught heart, and bids it break." Macbeth. G 2 84 THE SHADOW the subject, and then proceed to learn what followed. SECTION III. It has been observed that Kwan was very strict in the regulation of his family. His suspicions being now excited by Loo- kung's proposing the match, he innnediately stopped up the space under the wall by means of earth and bricks, and ordered that some one might always attend on his daughter, nor suffer her to be alone. From this time the lovers were not only prevented from seeing each other personally, but even their very shadows were separated. As Chin-seng could have no further connnu- nication with Yu-kiuen, he made' some more verses, of wliich the suhjrct was this separation, and ackled them on to the enil of his former ones. IN THE WATER. 85 Yu-kiuen had only understood his having courted some one else, without knowing any thing of the match having been broken off. She inveighed bitterly against the fickleness of her lover, who could thus break his vow and leave her to misery. She was also very much incensed against the selfishness of Loo-kung, who (she thought) had taken the intended son-in- law of another to himself, and instead of beins: the negociator of a match, converted himself into a father-in-law. She felt con- vinced that his proposal of the marriage to her father was insincere, and nothing more than a way to save appearances, and that therefore her father had refused him. This vexation of mind having lasted some time, at length ended in her refusing both food and drink ; and by degrees she became seriously indisposed. The injury which Kin-yun thought she 86 THE SHADOW had suffered was nothing more than a mis- take, as was also the resentment of Yu-kiuen towards Chin-seng ; and though their sick- ness proceeded from different causes, they were both founded originally in an error. Chin-seng, also, was afibcted with an indis- position, which pardy resembled that of Kin-3^un, and partly that of Yu-kiuen ; for when he thought of the latter, he looked upon Kin-yun as his enemy, and said that she was the cause of his disappointment ; and when he thought of the former (who was not inferior in beauty and whose age corresponded with his own) he looked with resentment upon Yu-kiucn, and inveighed against her perfidy and deceit, saying that when she heartl of his having proposed to Kin-yun, she had gone to her lather and asked him to close up the wall, thus assum- ing a pretension to great virtue and correct- IN THE WATER. 87 ness.* His father and mother, seeing that he was not likely to marry either of them, could only let matters take their course, and wait the event. The more indisposed Kin-yun became, so much the more desirous was Loo-kung to conclude another match for her: and her indisposition seemed to increase in pro- portion to his anxiety on this point. Being ignorant of the real cause of her uneasiness, he thought that it arose merely from being disappointed of her wedding, and that it was only necessary to find another husband in order to restore her spirits. He therefore commissioned people to look out; but it so happened that all the suitors who came to his house were particularly frightful and disa- greeable ; so that the maids, when they saw them enter one after another, could * A tedious soliloquy of Chin-seng in the original is shortened in the translation. 88 THE SHADOW not help screaming with affright. After a succession of these disagreeable events, Kin- yan became more and more sick and re- duced; and she lay upon her bed, almost ready to die. When Loo-kung saw this, he became somewhat alarmed, and inquiring carefully of her maids, discovered the real cause of her indisposition. He then began to repent of what he had done, saying, " when a woman has been engaged, it is a very im- proper thing to change : and there is no wonder in her being hurt. It is all my fault ! When Too came to me, in order to get off the match, I ought not to have given my con- sent; but having once given it, I cannot again go and urge him on the subject. Be- sides, I have engaged tt) do my good offices for Chin-seng, and as an honourable man values his word more than gold, how can 1 break my promise? The only way will be to convert the two matches into one, and IN THE WATER. 89 bring all the three people together;* but keep old Kwan in ignorance of a part, until the whole is concluded, and then let him into the secret; for when it is irrevocable, though he should be ever so violent he can- not alter it." There was still, however, a difficulty, in regard to the precedence of the two wives; but having considered carefully for a while, he found out an expedient even for this, saying, " of old, when Ngo-hwang and Niu-ying, both of the family of the Emperor Yaou, espoused the great Shun, they surely were not distinguished into first and second wife, but styled each other sisters.'' Having made up his mind, he directed the attendants to comfort Kin-yun, and invited Too to come over to a confer- ence with him. He informed him " that there was a way by which all parties might * That is, let Chin-seng marry both the ladies. 90 THE SHADOW be accommodated : which would prevent his own adopted daughter having a second lover, and by which the character of Kwan's daughter might be preserved ; that his son Chin-seng was extremely fortunate; and that the good which awaited him seemed to be the especial result of his happy destiny/' Too was extremely glad to hear this, and asked him how it was all to happen. Loo- kung answered, " Your brother-in-law is of so obstinate a disposition that it will be better not to appeal to his feelings, but to bring him round by stratagem. I have arrived at the middle of life without havino; children, and he has often advised mc to adopt a male successor. I shall now tell him that I have adopted one, and that I am desirous of obtaining Yu-kiucn as my daughtor-in- law. When he considers our friendship, he certainly will consent. After his con- sent is obtained, I shall also tell him that IN THE WATER. §^ as my daughter is unmarried, I wish to invite Chin-seng to become her husband, and request him to agree to the compound alUance, to complete the harmony of all parties. If he then persists in remaining at variance with you, he will lose my friend- ship also. But having once given his con- sent, he cannot, I think, well alter the agreement. I shall then chuse a fortunate day, and under the pretence of his daugh- ter's marriage on the one hand, and of your son's on the other, get the three people together, and complete their union. Is not this an excellent plan V AVhen Too had heard this, he smiled, and could not help bowing down to the ground, exclaim- ing, that " Kwan's ability and kindness were both of them supernatural : he could not sufficiently express his obligation and praise/' Too next proceeded to report this unusu- 92 THE SHADOW ally good news to his son. Cliin-seng, who amidst his twofold sorrow received this double portion of happiness, could set no bounds to his joy. Though his grief and uneasiness had been great, the present remedy was fully adequate to curing them. Kin-yun, too, when she heard the same from her attendants and understood the change that had taken place in her favour, got well without any physic. She had only to wait till the time appointed for the marriage, to become " the sister of Niu- ying, and the wife of Shun." — (p. 89). Unhaj)pily, however, only two out of the three sick persons were as yet recovered ; and Yu-kiuen, the third, had not heard the good news. Loo-kung lind an intcrvit^w with Kwan, and entrapjxMl him in ihc^ snare which they had prepared for him : tor Kwan, seeing the severe indisposilioii of his daughter, had a natural wish to see her IN THE WATER. 93 married as soon as possible ; and as Loo- kung was his particular friend and col- league, he was glad to cement their intimacy by the match. He therefore gave his hearty consent, and made not the slightest diffi- culty. Loo-kung, fearing that he might possibly repent, waited only a day or two before he sent the marriage presents. When these had been received, he men- tioned the match with Chin-seng. Kwan, though he did not express his disapproba- tion, could not help feeling displeasure at this. He laughed at Loo-kung, and told him that he had chosen a good daughter- in-law, but a bad son-in-law : and that while he was admitting a friend at the great gate, the devil* had got in at the postern ; in short, that what he had gained * Kwei, " a devil, or evil spirit." The name civilly given by the Chinese to Europeans, with the addition of Fan, " foreign." 94 THE SHADOW was not equal to what he had lost. Still, however, as the thing was done, it was useless to speak, or to take him to task about it. Yu-kiuen, when she heard that her lover was about to espouse Kin-yun, and that she herself was to marry into Loo-kung's family, and live with her great enemy, was unable to express her resentment at this additional disgrace and insult. She was for instantly writing a secret letter to Chin-song, telling him her sentiments on the occasion ; and then throwing herself into the water, or suspending herself from a beam, in order to put an end to her existence. Her maids, however, kept such strict Match, and her parents were so cautious, that she could not only not find a messenger to carry her letter, but had not a j)lace wherein she could write it. One morning, an attendant came in to IN THE WATER. 95 announce that Kin-yun, hearing her friend was unwell, wished to come over in per- son, and ask after her health. Yu-kiuen, hearing this, was very much disturbed, thinking that the other, after having won her lover, and snatched away her hopes, was coming, in the exultation of her heart, to boast her success over her; and that, unable to wait until the period when they were to meet, she had anticipated the time for insulting her. She was determined, however, that Kin-yun should not be grati- fied in her malice ; and urged her mother to send a person immediately with an answer. She was not aware that Kin-yun, far from having any bad intentions, wished to imitate the bird* which is the messenger of glad tidings, and fly to her ear with the * Hy-tsio, a poetical name for the swallow. 96 THE SHADOW secret intelligence. Loo-kiing was very desirous to hasten the union, knowing that Yu-kiuen, the daughter of such a man as Kwan, would not consent to lose her re- spectability, but as soon as she heard that ^e was contracted to somebody else, with- out knowing the real truth, would certainly put an end to herself. If he sent a note by any other person, her doors were so strictly guarded, that no admittance could be gained : he therefore made use of his daughter as a messenger to communicate the intelligence. When Yu-kiuen saw that the answer which she had returned had not the effect of stopping Kin-yun, she was obliged to let her come in : but she previously put on the face of a person who had suft'ered a great injury and disgrace, and resolved, that as soon as the other had uttered what she had to say, she would overwhelm her, in return, IN THE WATER. 97 Tvith a sharp and chilling answer. — To her surprise, as soon as the ceremonies of meet- ing were over, Kin-yun stretched out her two hands, and placing them on Yu-kiuen's shoulder, drew her a little towards herself, like a person who had something particular to say, which she did not wish others to hear. — Yu-kiuen was much amazed, and as soon as they had taken a little tea to- gether, led her visitor into another room, and asked the reason of her behaviour. Kin- yun answered, " The purpose of my coming to-day is not so much to inquire after your health, as to communicate to you some joy- ful intelligence. The poem concerning the rencontre of the shadows has already been converted into a romance, and it is right that we bring it to a finale. In addition to the principal female performer* in the * For the names of the usual characters in the Chinese dramas, see Morrison's Dictionary, (according to the sounds,) under the word He, " a theatrical performance.'* H 98 THE SHADOW Drama, an inferior one has been added ; — but you need not be anxious about the result." Yu-kiuen with great surprise asked her meaning. Kin-jun then ex- plained minutely from beginning to end her father's plan for the union; at which the former was greatl}^ pleased. — All three of the sick persons had now found a cure for their indisposition: and they agreed together upon the means to be pursued, only keeping in ignorance one person, who was Kwan. — Loo-kinig fixed upon a fortunate day, and at once got Chin-seng and Yu-kiuen to his house, where his daugh- ter awaited her nuptials. The marriage was then concluded, and all three apj)eared in the hall together, and went through the regular ceremonies.* * lli'ir isoiniltrd a rliapsoiiv uftlu aiitlior's, iii wlmli he coiiipan's tin- lailns lo (lowers, ami thi- lu ro tit a trot-; uiul till' hero lo the inooii, niid the hulits t«) two li^ht clouds; gravely eiuliu^ with calling them *' a hiaie uml u half of D.ilies." IN THE WATER. 99 When the marriage had been concluded three days, Loo-kung directed a feast to be prepared, and invited Too and Kwan to a meeting of relations. As, however, he was apprehensive that the latter might not come, he wrote a short note, and folded it within the ticket of invitation. In this, he called to Kwan's recollection " the words which he had written down on the table, about dreaming, and exhorted him, as he was now become a connexion of his, not to suffer a trivial animosity to interfere with the due celebration of the important ceremonies : — and he again fixed the day for the meet- ing.'' — The commencement of this note had no effect on Kwan, but when he came to the mention of the important ceremonies, he could not throw off the obligations of propriety, and he felt that it would not be right to borrow a pretext for refusing to go. On the day appointed, therefore, he went H 2 100 THE SHADOW over to the meetinsc of relations ; and when he arrived, found Too already there, in his proper place. Loo-kung, having ordered a carpet to be spread, requested his friends to stand in the highest place; and himself taking the lowest, they all bowed down four times. He then requested Too to step aside, and himself bowed down to the ground four times before Kwan, saying, " The four first pros- trations were on account of our meeting: the four last are to request your forgiveness for myself; and I rely on your liberality for excusing all the errors which I have com- mitted from the beginning." — Kwan an- swered, " You have hitherto been a plain and straight forward sort of ptMsonage: whence comes it, then, lliat you are so ceremonious on a sudden? Perlja])s, know- ing WW lo hi; ratlicr a punctilious character, you have a iniiul to lakr iiic otl." i IN THE WATER. 101 Loo-kung replied, "how could I dare to act thus? — From the time when we agreed upon the marriage, I have committed a great many errors : as innumerable as the hairs of my head ; and I have only to entreat you to consider our present close connexion, and extend your liberal forgiveness towards me. The proverb says ' when the son has offended his father, he can do no more than carry to him the instrument of his own punishment* — this applies with equal truth to our case. I have already performed my prostrations; the marriage is concluded: and if you were inclined to punish me, it would be of no avail." — Kwan could not understand the meaning of all this, and still thought it must be a mere affectation of humility : but as soon as Loo-kung's speech was over, the music on both sides of the steps at the entrance struck up, and dea- fened all their ears like thunder; so that they 102 Tin: SHADOW were not only ignorant of what each other said, but could not hear even themselves speak. In the midst of this uproar, in came a number of attendants, with the three newly married persons, to the hall; these, arranging themselves on the carpet, only waited for the signal to prostrate them- selves. — Kwan stared lor some time, and saw his daughter alone on the left; but all the rest were strangers, and he could not perceive his son-in-law. — Then raising his voice, he cried out to her saying, — " Who are you, that are thus standing there alone, without paying any regard to propriety, and disgracing yourself by such irregular beha- viour.? — Do you still remain?" — He then raised his voice still higher, in a rage, but nobody could hear him. When the three j)rostrated themselves, Kwan turned round, and wanted to go away, l)ut his twt) tVicnds came up lo him, and one ot tluMii lioldini; IN THE WATER. 103 him by each arm, not only would not let him go out, but likewise prevented his return- ing the ceremony; thus squeezing him on each side, like a pair of torturing sticks. When he had received the twelve prostra- tions, (four from each) in due form, the two ladies immediately retired, and the musi- cians were then ordered to cease. K^v'an changed colour, and exclaimed to Loo- kung, " When my daughter appeared in the hall, how is it that I did not see your son? Your daughter and your son-in-laAV are not sufficiently near relations to perform their prostrations to me on this occasion. I cannot understand the meaning of this ceremony, and must request you to explain it." — Loo-kung answered, " I will not de- ceive you. Your nephew is my adopted son, and my adopted son is your son-in- law, and your son-in-law is also my son-in- law. He has on this occasion acted a double 104 THE SHADOW character, and hence, in the performance of the late ceremony, you received twelve prostrations. You are a very intelligent personage, and must surely understand it now." Kwan considered a little, but still could not make it out, and said to Loo-kung, " I cannot comprehend a single word of what you say: it is a myster}- which I cannot unravel. Am I come to a meeting of re- lations, or am I in a dream?" — Loo-kung answered, " I mentioned the subject of dre;aniing in my note to you, and you should be aware that it is a subject which was first started, not by me, but by yourself, when I proposed the match to you, and when you wrote down your answer on \hv table. You then sowed the seeds of that dream which has now come to maturity. — But man's life is a dream ; why, then, need you make a great stir about it .'' — I advise you IN THE WATER. 105 to take the thing as it comes, and bring this dream to a happy conclusion !" — When Kwan had heard these words, he began to comprehend it, and asked Loo-kung, " how he, so correct a man, could practise such deceit: that it" he wanted to act as the negotiator of the match, he should have spoken clearly, and not have laid this trap for his unwariness/' — To this Loo-kung replied, "And did I not speak clearly ? — but you, instead of giving me a plain answer, thought proper to deal in tropes and figures, as if you wanted to set me a dreaming. I therefore could not speak to you any longer in a straight forw ard manner ; but was com- pelled to act to the best of my abilities. If indeed I had only sought my own particular good, and, deceiving you into the marriage of your daughter alone, caused you to look ridiculous, — this would have been an Unpardonable offence: but by giving my 106 THE SHADOW IN THE WATER. own daughter in marriage, I also effected the marriage of yours. On performing the ceremonies in the hall, I still gave your daughter the higher place, and my own willingly took the lower. There certainly, then, never was such another conscientious contriver as myself. I entreat you to relinquish your angry intentions, and practise the rule of forgiveness." — Kwan, when he had heard thus far, relaxed the rigidity of his visage; and after a little more explanation,* all parties having become good friends, they closed the day with feasting and merriment. * The conclusion, which in the original consists nieielv of a further conversation, repeating what the na(l« raheaily knows, has been a little curtailed in the transhition. THE TWIN SISTERS A TALE. TRANSLATED FROM THE CHINESE. Bonus atque fidus Judex. Hor. THE TWIN SISTERS. Early in the reign of an Emperor, of the Ming dynasty, there dwelt, in a city of the province of Hoo-kwang, a merchant, named Siaou-kiang, who had the misfortune to Uve on very indifferent terms with his wife. They were for a long while without any family, until, after a lapse of many years, two daughters, twins, were born to them. It is a popular remark, that sons generally re- semble the father, and daughters themother ; but these two sisters, contrary to what is usually the case, did not inherit the features of either of their parents; and they seemed like the children of some other family. Neither was the difference confined to their persons, for their dispositions were quite 110 THE TWIN SISTERS. as dissimilar. As the father and mother were extremely plain and very stupid, so, on the contrary, the daughters were very handsome and particularly clever. After ten years of age, they began to resemble fair flowers glitterino; with dew, or fragrant herbs agitated by the breeze: and their beauty every day increased, until, having reached the age of fourteen or fifteen, no one could behold tliem without emotion. Not only were the young men in love with them, but even those of a more advanced age, when they beheld them, confessed the power of their charms. Their dispositions were extremely docile, but notwithstanding this, they had learned but little, and the whole extent of their knowled<2;e was confined to fmures.* As to the use of the needle, and other I'emale accom[)lishments, they needed but little * Tilt ii fatluT l)tiiiii a nuK-hant. THE TWIN SISTERS. Ill instruction in order to acquire them. Their dress and ornaments were (from their station in hfe) coarse and ordinary, but jet, when these two girls were compared with the daughters of more wealthy and dignified persons, it was allowed by all, that they need not change their homely dress, and metal ornaments, for the silks and jewels of the others. As they were so very handsome and engaging, it naturally followed that the young men of fortune and family should seek them. The good man and his dame were more like enemies than husband and wife. The former wanted to marry his daughters without the interference of the latter; and his wife, on the other hand, wished to obtain two sons-in-law without the knowledge of her husband. With this principle of mutual 112 THE TWIX SISTERS. deceit, they each of them secretly engaged with their separate friends. Thouo;h the father was severe in his own house, he was naturally of a kind and friendly disposition : not like his wife, whose turbulence led her, when provoked, to make the neighbourhood ring with her violence. People therefore said to them- selves, that it would be an easier thing to dupe him than her, and that of the two, it was better to aid the wife than the husband. Hence it was, that the latter was more suc- cessful in her adherents than the former, and after a little while, for each of her daughters a husband was selected. A for- tunate day was chosen for the marriage, and they (the Bridegrooms) were desired to send the wedding presents: but with a view to prevent her husband's disapproba- tion and rejection ol' ihe match, he was kept in ignorance oi" the whole. THE TWIN SISTERS. 113 There were some sensible persons, who said, that the propriety of a daughter's marriage ought to be determined by the father, and that if the mother would not consent, the matter should be referred to the magistrate, who would never side with an obstinate woman, nor put aside the hus- band for the sake of favoring the wife. These persons wanted to get somebody to make their proposals to the former : but unfortunately, all those whom they asked, proved to be as ready to deceive him, as they were afraid of his wife, and when in- vited to act against her, they immediately made some pretext for declining. They dared not to incur her resentment, saying, that if they offended the husband, they had nothing;; to do but to wait until he broke out, and then reason with him : and if he w^as violent, they might still go and com- plain to the magistrate. But if they of- I 114 THE TWIN SISTERS. fended his wife, and her anger was excited, it was not fit for them to contend with a woman ; and should she abuse, and even chastise them, they must bear it, and could do nothing in return. Thus it was, that no one would consent to assist those who wished to make propo- sals to the good man, and they were ac- cordingly obliged to open the subject to him in person. He had been very much nettled at seeing people in the first instance go to his wife, without coming to consult him, and therefore, on the present occasion, when the marriage of his daughters was proposed to him, he echoed his consent with great satisfaction, and made not the slightest objection. The suitors told him, that every one was afraid of his wife, and that, for this reason, none would act as mediators. What, there- fore, was to be done Z lie rcphed, " When THE TWIN SISTERS. 115 the parties are unknown to each other, it is necessar}' to make use of such agents ; but when I have already given my consent, what more is required V The suitors, hearing this, were very glad, and a lucky day was chosen on the spot for the trans- mission and reception of the marriage pre- sents. The husband's plan was similar to his wife's, inasmuch as he would make no dis- closure beforehand, but left the matter to be developed by the occasion. It hap- pened that the lucky day fixed upon by both parties was the same, and the gifts of all the four bridegrooms arrived at the door together. The gongs made a great din, and the different articles composing the presents were spread out profusely, so that there was no telling to what names they belonged. The first idea was, that the bridegrooms, I 2 116 THE TWIN SISTERS. knowing the bad understanding which ex- isted between the parents of the bride, and fearful of offending either party, had each caused a pair of ceremonial tickets to be made out, one for Siaou-kiang, and the other for his wife, thinking it better to be too ceremonious, than not enough so. When, however, the tickets were examined a little closer, it turned out, to the great astonishment of either party, that no two names w^ere the same, but that all four of the cards had a different title. The father and mother stared at one another, and both broke out at once. Said one, " In addition to my two sons-in-law, whence come these two wretched pre- tenders V — Said the other, " AVho has sent all these things to be placed by the side of my presents T' He exclaimed to his wife, " M lio will have the audacity to receive one of those THE TWIN SISTERS. 117 gifts, without the consent of me, the master of the house?" — His wife rephed, " With- out leave from me, the mistress of the family, who will venture to take any thing that is here V Upon this, the good man said, " It is a maxim, that a woman, before her marriage, must obey her father, and after it, her hus- band. Now with respect to my daughters, I being their father, it is their duty to be guided by me, and with respect to yourself, I being 3'our husband, have a right to control 3'ou. What is the reason, then, of your behaving in this manner?" — She im- mediately replied, " It is also a maxim, that in the marriage of a son, the father is to have the direction, but in the marriage of a daughter, the mother. If the former were our case at present, then indeed you might do as you pleased, but as we are now concerned about the latter, I, as a 118 THE TWIN SISTERS. matter of course, have the sole right to command. Under what pretence, then, do you meddle with my affairs V From words they would very soon have proceeded to blows, but those who were standing by prevented them, and kept them apart from one another. The wife would not listen to another word. She took the presents which belonged to her two favorites, and receiving them all as they were inserted in the list, told the peo- ple to go back with her answer. At the same time, she ordered all the rest to be thrown out of doors, and would not let one of them remain in the house. Her husband was of course greatly en- raged at this. He, in his turn, had them all brought back, and emptying the boxes and bowls, wrote an answer himself, and sent it. He was well aware that this double THE TWIN SISTERS. 119 espousal must ultimately come before the magistrate ; but deferred the presentation of a written report, and was resolved to try what prompt and forcible measures would do in the first instance. The parents of his intended sons-in-law were desired by him to chuse a fortunate day, and hav- ing made a grand preparation of lanterns and torches, to engage a number of sturdy fellows to support them in carrying off his daughters by force. Should this measure fail, it would not be too late to present an address. Those two persons readily adopted the suggestion, and chose an early day for the nuptials. They hired a number of ruffians to follow the chairs, with a hope that they might carry every thing by numbers. It remained for them to discover, that such a plan might answer well enough against men, but that a female opponent 120 THE TWIN SISTERS. was not so easily discomfited. The wife placed herself at her door, with one of the bars in her hands, and by her resolution plainly shewed, that she would have no mercy on those who attempted to cross the threshold. They all dispersed like mice to their holes, and left half of the chairs, lan- terns and torches behind them ; which might be called levying "contributions from the vanquished." All these were seized and detained by the lady for her own use. Her husband, greatly incensed at this, immediately urged his two friends to pre- sent an address without delay. These persons, however, knew very well that such an address on this occasion was not likely to be very successful, and that it was not usual for persons, so closely connected, to proceed to law against each other. They therelbrc determined not to ()pj)osc \wv openly, but to slate that they had been THE TWIN SISTERS. 121 repulsed with violence from Siaou-kiang's door, and lay the whole blame upon him in the first instance. They resolved to resort to the Chy-foo, the first magistrate of the district, instead of the Chy-hien. When their address had been presented, the husband sent in a statement of the facts as they really happened, by way of answer. The two friends also sent in particular statements, and, as if they deemed it inex- pedient to bring a married woman too much forward on such an occasion, merely placed her at the head of the witnesses, saying, that she was the mother of the two girls who had been betrothed, and should be examined by the magistrate. At that time the office of chief magis- trate was exercised by a deputy. This person had not long been in the situation, but bore the character of a very upright man, and possessed high literary rank at 122 THE TWIN SISTERS. an early age. When he had received the address, he ordered a notice to be put up, fixing the period of trial within a few days. He previously sent for the husband in order to examine him, and afterwards for all the four persons, as well as ever}^ one whose name was mentioned in the address, with the exception of the woman ; for he sup- posed, that as she had a husband to guide her, any evidence which she could give nmst be the same as his, since it was not customary for husband and wife to differ on such points. He was very little aware that on this occasion the mother of the betrothed daugh- ters was the enemy of the intended fathers- in-law. He had heard of litigations be- tween friends, but seldom of any between such near connexions as these. A\ hen the wife observed that she was not called upon for her evidence, she complained loudly of THE TWIN SISTERS. 123 the injustice that was done her, and the Mandarin was therefore obhged to send for her up. She pointed to her husband, and said, " Though he may pretend to the character of a man, he has very httle of the sense of one, and any body that pleases can make a fool of him. He has no regard to his daughters' happiness, and those whom he has chosen to be their husbands are the most disreputable persons in the neighbourhood. It was for this reason that I endeavoured to provide somewhat better for them, and would not permit him to have the control. I have to beg that your worship will con- descend to give me your instructions." When the Mandarin had heard what she had to say, he observed it was reasonable enough. He then sent for the husband, to examine him again. The latter stated, " that his wife was of a very turbulent dis- 124 THE TWIN SISTERS. position, and on every occasion endeavour- ed to brow-beat and get the better of her husband. That on common occasions, he was ready to submit to this, but the mar- riage of his daughters was a thing of such importance, that he could never think of giving up his right into her hands."' The judge, seeing that what he said was also reasonable, felt himself at a loss to decide between them. He then addressed himself to both, saying, " According to rule, the husband has a right to be arbitra- tor on such an occasion as that in dispute, but in family affairs it is sometimes not possible to adhere strictly to general rules, nor to consider thin sis too much in the abstract. Wait until I call your dauorhters before me, and hear what they have to say : whether they think that their fathrr or their mother is doing what is best for them." Both the husband and the wife prostrated THE TWIN SISTERS. 125 themselves, and said thej were quite satis- fied with this arrangement. The Mandarin then issued a written order, and sent per- sons to summon the daughters. When these were gone, he said to himself, that " as the paients were both so plain and ordinary in their appearance, it was not likely that fair flowers should be produced from reeds : but if the daughters were still more ugly than the parents, there was no telling where it would end!" He then, with a countenance on which surprise was ready depicted, waited their arrival in his hall. As soon as they were arrived, all the in- ferior officers and attendants, without their usual regard to decorum, pressed forward in a crowd to gaze, as if some prodigy had dropt down from the skies. As for the Mandarin himself, he was altogether amazed, and could not guess whence two 126 THE TWIN SISTERS. such divine persons could have flown thi- ther. Luckily for him, his emissaries at the same moment announced that " such a person's daughters were arrived." He then knew that flowers of extraordinary beauty had for once been produced from reeds, and that the daughters were not only an improvement on their parents, but that they retained no resemblance whatever of them. When he had recovered from his sur- prise, he addressed them thus, " Your father and mother, being unable to agree together, have, it appears, betrothed you two to four different persons, and at last refer their dispute lo my decision. Your father says that your mother is in the wrong, and she, in her turn, complains of him. It has been observed of old, that * An upright magistrate can ill interfere with family alfairs.' 1 have accordingly THE TWIN SISTERS. 12? sent for you to ask whether, in general, your father or 3^our mother has acted with most discretion ?" Both the girls were naturally shy and bashful, and w^ould at any time have run away at the sight of one man, but now, when several hundred pairs of eyes were fixed, and as it w'ere nailed, upon them, they were ready to hide themselves under the table. The judge^s eyes were clearer than other people's. Having observed them for some time, he asked them how thej^ could give answ^ers if they were so bashful ? When they replied not a word, though he repeat- ed his question several times, he began to draw his evidence from their looks. These seemed to say " that both of their parents were a little in the wrong, but it did not become them, as their daughters, to men- tion it." 128 THE TWIN SISTERS. The judge inwardly understood their meaning, and said to himself, " Two such charming young women ought not to be given to ordinary husbands. I shall not now ask whether the father or the mother be in the right, but send for all four of the intended bridegrooms, and compare them together. Should the girls consent to marry any of them, I shall award to them the same." Having thus resolved, he was on the point of issuing a written order for their appearance, when the four fathers-in- law kneeled down before him, and said, " It is not necessary for your worship to send out the order. Our sons are all of them waiting outside, each hoping that his wife may be awarded to him. IMay we proceed to call them in V The judge said, " If that is the case, make haste and tell them to come in." — They all four went out, aiul presently re- THE TWIN SISTERS. 129 turned, each leading in his son, saying, " This is my boy : I hope your worship will award to him his wife/' — The latter how- ever shook his head, and observed the four youths narrowly. They looked as if they had all come from the same stock, being very strange and uncouth in their appear- ance. Far from being good looking, there was not one without some defect in his limbs or features. The judge said to himself, " To chuse them husbands from among these four, would be like searching for a hero among dwarfs. How can I possibly select one! — I did not think that so much beauty and such ill-fortune could be combined." He then sighed, and calling on the father's favourites to kneel down on the left side, and on the mother's, to do the same on the right, he told the two girls to kneel down in the midst, and spoke to them as follows.^- 130 THE TWIN SISTERS. " All those who were engaged by your father and mother to marry you are now present. I have already asked you for your real sentiments. Since you would not speak, I suppose that in the first place, shame prevented you, and in the second, the difficulty of mentioning your parents' faults. I do not now call on you to speak a word, but merel}^ to turn your heads a little on one side, and thereby evince your real wishes. If you wish to marry your father's favourites, turn yourselves to the left; if your mother's, to the right. But renicmbei', that in this slight movement is involved the welfare of your whole life, and your choice should therefore be a good one." When he had said this, the whole assem- bly anxiously fixed their eyes upon the two damsels, to see tlicni turn their heads. They, however, on the first entrance of the four suitors, had looked at them, and ob- THE TWIN SISTERS. 131 serving their uncouth appearance, they hung down their heads, and closed their eyes, and let fall their tears in silence. When the judge had spoken to them, they turned neither to the right, nor to the left, but remaining fixed, with their faces to- wards him, began to weep aloud. The more he pressed them to speak, the more violently did they cry ; until all those who were present began to w^eep in sympathy with them, and every one felt the extent of their hardship. The judge then said, " It would seem from this, that the persons chosen by both your parents are exceptionable. You need not think of marrying any of them ; I will provide for you myself. There is no good reason why two such persons should be given as wives to booby clowns. Place yourselves on one side; I have arranged it K 2 132 THE TWIN SISTERS. all for you already. Call up the father and mother.'' — They both appeared and knelt down before the table, on which the judge striking with his hand, cried out in great anger, " You two must be devoid of all principle to regard your daughters' welfare as mere child's play. If you wanted to give them in marriage, 3'ou should have consulted together, and seen that the parties were suited to each other: not have endea- voured to unite persons so dissimilar. You may have learned, from what has here passed, the probable result of the imion had it taken place. It is fortunate that the affair was referred to mc, who shall decide it in a manner cpiitc ditierent from what is customary. Had you gone to another officer, he would have adhered to thi' usual track, and awarded them to onv or other of the suitors; and thus the happiness of these two young women would have been THE TWIN SISTERS. 133 destroyed by a single stroke of his pencil.* They shall now marry neither of the parties to whom they were betrothed. I will depute persons to provide a suitable match for them. Do not suppose, that in taking this step, I am going to consult my private views, or to violate justice. On the con- trary, I am adhering to the strictest reason and propriety. Wait till I have made out an adjudication, by which you will all be satisfied.'' He then took up his pencil, and wrote the following document. " It appears that Siaou-kiang and his wife, having daughters, twins, of extraordinary beauty, many persons were desirous to obtain them in marriage, and each has endeavoured to effect his views in a differ- ent way. As the father and mother were at variance, and the agents of one party * The Chinese write with a hair pencil. 134 THE TWIN SISTERS. endeavoured to deceive the husband, while those of the other aimed at keeping the wife in ignorance, mistakes and confusion were the consequence. There were four husbands provided for the two brides, and as the hitter could not divide themselves, it was not possible for the union to take place. As the daughters appear disgusted with those whom it was intended they should marry, I have pitied their distress, and departed from what is usually considered as the proper course, for the sake of per- forming an act of benevolence: but at the same time, without infringing the laws for my own private views. In all contracts of marriage, the consent of both father and mother, and the intervention of negotiators, are indispensable. Now, in the case of the mother's favourites, though there have been negotiators, there was no father's consent. Were 1 to sanction their claim, it would THE TWIN SISTERS. 135 be a dangerous precedent. In the case of Siaou-kiang's favourites, though there was the father's consent, there were no ne- gotiators, and were I to permit them to succeed, the precedent would be equally pernicious. Both cases, then, would at once violate ancient law, and modern opi- nion. The four suitors must seek brides elsewhere, for these two cannot be given to an}^ of them. It is better that they should be separated now, than that, by being united, they should become miserable here- after. Though, therefore, I do this out of compassion for the one party, it is at the same time the most beneficial course that can be pursued for the other. Nobody need again address me on the subject: this judgment is decisive.'' When it was written, a crier was ordered to read it aloud ; after which, every one was sent out, nor was any body permitted to 136 THE TWIN SISTERS. make farther remark. Persons were then despatched to those whom the judge em- ployed as agents for procuring proper matches for the two damsels. These were ordered, in the event of succeeding in their search, to repair to the judge, who, if he approved of the persons, would permit the marriage to take place. After continuino; their search for some time, those agents brought a number of youths, who, though they were said to be suitable, did not please the judge. He therefore hit upon another expedient, and determined to chuse for the two dauohters husbands according to literary merit; that they might excel in talent, ;ls well as in personal accomplishments. It happened that some country people had lately caught a couple ol' li\e deer, which they had presented to him, and which suited very well with his present THE TWIN SISTERS. 137 scheme. He issued a notice, fixing a par- ticular day for a literary examination : and required of the competitors, that instead of writing on the outside of their essays, (as was customary,) the particulars of their age, they should state merely whether they were married, or single. He said that as the peri- odical examination for literary degrees was not far distant, he wished to be previously acquainted in some measure with the abili- ties of the Candidates, and that he had provi- ded, as the subject of contention for the un- married, two beautiful damsels; andfor those who were already married, a brace of curious deer. Those who won the prizes would be the first literary candidates of the year. At the place of examination there was a vacant building. The judge sent for the mother and her two daughters, to live in the upper part, and kept the deer in a place below. When the notice was once issued, 138 THE TWIN SISTERS. it roused the candidates in all the surround- ing districts. Those, ^\\\o were already married, were inspired chiefly by the desire of success, and regarded the deer as merely tokens of this. The young men who were unmarried were extremely rejoiced at having a chance of obtaining a handsome bride, together with their literary honours. When the day of examination arrived, they exerted themselves to the utmost for the sake of obtaining so desirable a reward. When it was over, they never thought of returning home, but all remained in a body on the spot, for the sake of hearing the decision. After three days, a list was published, in which about ten persons from each dis- trict appeared selected for re-examination. Those who were thus chosen suspected, that this second examination was not so nmch to determine their literary merit, as to as- THE TWIN SISTERS. 139 certain their personal appearance, and such of them as were good looking began to entertain great hopes. When the appointed day arrived, they dressed and adorned themselves with scrupulous nicety, and when they appeared before the judge, assu- med their best looks, with a hope that he might be pleased with their appearance and place them at the head of the candidates. The judge was as able to distinguish between their respective personal qualifica- tions, as their abilities and knowledge: and being desirous of ascertaining the first, he made his remarks upon them when their names were called over. He observed whether their appearance denoted persons of respectability and wealth, or otherwise. When the examination was concluded, he desired his officer, before he had come out to his audience hall, next morning, to collect the musicians, and proceeding to the place 140 THE TWIN SISTERS. where the two females and the deer were stationed, to conduct them to his office. The deer were to be placed on one side of the hall ; and the two ladies, seated in ornamented sedans, used at weddings, were to be stationed on the other. Tiie flowered lanterns and the music were to be in readiness to proceed to the marriage. When his orders were given, the judge returned to his house to examine the essays. At daylight the next morning he issued a list, containing the names of the four successful candidates, the two married, and the two bachelors. The rest, ranged according to their merits, were to have in- ferior marks of distinction conferred upon them. There is no occasion to notice the two who obtained the deer as their rewards, and therefore Ave shall not mention their names. Of the two who won the ladies. THE TWIN SISTERS. 141 one was a graduate, named Sze-tsin, and the other a younger candidate, whose name was Chy-yuen. All those whose names had been noticed at the examination, entered the Hall of Audience to learn the result. When they observed on which side the two ladies were, they all crowded thither to see the damsels whose beauty was so famous ; and that part of the hall was filled with spectators. On the side where the deer were stationed, a single person only, in the dress of a graduate, stood, apparently in sorrow, and without a desire to go and behold the two beauties. Some of those in the hall, who observed him, said that this must be one of the successful candidates who was married, and who knowing that neither of the ladies would come to his share, but that he had obtained one of the deer, had previously come to make his selection, that he might 142 THE TWIX srSTEKS. take the best when the time for chusing arrived. To the surprise of these persons, how- ever, some of the candidates from the other side of the hall went over to him, and pay- ing their respects, said, " We congratulate you, sir ; one of these fair ladies is yours/' That graduate however waved his hand in token of denial, and said, " I have nothing to do with them/' They all exclaimed, " You are the first of the four successful competitors, and are also unmarried. How then can you say that you have nothing to do with them?" He answered, " We shall soon see the judge, and you will then be informed/' They could not understand his meaning, but supposed that these words were nothing more than a little modesty on his part. When the drum liad been struck three times, the judge came into his hall, and THE TWIN SISTERS. 143 those whose names had been distinguished went to pay him their respects. He then asked, " Which are the four successful candidates ? I request them to stand aside, that I may address them.'' When his officer heard this, he read aloud the hst. Besides Sze-tsin, there should have ap- peared three others ; but two only were present, both of whom were married, and the absent one was the unmarried candidate. The judge upon this exclaimed, " How happens it, that on such an occasion as the present, he is not here V Sze-tsin replied, " He is a friend of mine, and lives in the same district. Not being aAvare of the business of to-day, he has not come.'' The judge said, *' Is this the graduate Sze-tsin? Sir, I have admired your abilities and learning. There could be no doubt of your succeeding at the present examina- tion. These two ladies are certainly very 144 THE TWIN SISTERS. beautiful, and their having obtained two such husbands is a just dispensation of Heaven." Sze-tsin bowed at this, and answered, " Your worship is very gracious; but I am a man of an infelicitous destiny, and unworthy to enjoy such great good. I request you will select a substitute in my room ; for I am unwilling to mar the hap- piness of my intended bride." The judge exclaimed, " How is this ! AVhat is the reason of your thus strangely declining ? Tell the officer to ask the two ladies which of them is the eldest, and request her to come to her husband." Sze-tsin again bowed, and stopping the officer, rec^uested tiiat he would not go. The judge said, " M hat is the reason of this?" Sze-tsin replied, " It is my un- happy fate to be condenmed to celibacy, as I am never to be* paired with a wife. All those to whom 1 have nuulc overtures THE TWIN SISTERS. 145 of marriage, no sooner were they engaged to me, than they became seized with a mortal sickness and died ; and in this man- ner, by the time I was twenty, I had been the innocent cause of the death of six dif- ferent ladies. All the fortune-tellers whom I have consulted, say that I am never to have a w ife, and that I ought therefore to become a priest of the religion of either F6 or Taou. Although now of the literary order, I must soon forsake letters, and become a priest. I will not venture again to hazard the life of any young woman, and thereby add to the list of m}^ sins." The judge, having heard him, replied, " Wh}^ should you do thus ? There is little faith to be put in such predictions. They were but unskilful di- viners who told you this, and if you have been unfortunate in your former addresses, it must have been by mere chance. Why should you behave like a man who has a L 146 THE TWIN SISTERS. Stoppage at the throat, and cannot eat? Though you seem bent upon your resolu- tion, I will not consent to it. I have, how- ever, one thing to observe : how happens it that the candidate Chy-yuen is not pre- sent ? In the first place, I had chosen an auspicious day, on purpose that he might come and be married ; and secondly, as the hand-writing of his second essay did not correspond with that of his first, I wished to question him a little on the subject. What is the meaning of his non-arrival V Sze-tsin, hearing this, answered, " I am possessed of a secret, which by right I should not have divulged ; but since your worship has said thus much, it might be still more culpable in me to conceal it. This candidate is a })articular friend of mine. As he was very poor, and had not wherewithal to wed, 1 formed an intention of assisting him. The two essays were both THE TWIN SISTERS. 147 of mj composition. The first was in his hand-writing, but the second, because he did not come, was written by me for him. I resolved, that should the first place be allotted to myself, I would yield up the prize to him ; but did not expect, that by very extraordinary luck, we should both of us have been preferred. Since your wor- ship has, through your great penetration, discovered the truth, my endeavour to serve my friend has turned out very much to his prejudice. 1 therefore am now compelled to entreat your pardon in his behalf, and to request, that you will extend to him, by your kindness, what I meditated for him.'* The judge replied, " Is this the state of the case? Had I not fortunately discovered the truth from you, a great injustice would have been done to one of the ladies. As the matter now stands, both the first and the second place are yours, and each of the L 2 148 THE TWIN SISTERS. ladies belongs to you. Any one may make pretensions to riches and honours, but such beauty as they possess is not to be found every where, and none should obtain, but such as deserve them ; certainly not a false pretender. Tell the officer immediately to request both the ladies to come hither, that the marriage may be concluded.'' Sze-tsin obstinately and repeatedly de- clined, observing, " that a man whose des- tiny it was never to be paired with a wife, and who could not have one, — how much less possible was it for him to have two?" The judge laughed at this, and said, " What has happened to-day is in exact conformity with your fortune. To be never paired with a wife meant, that there never could be two of you. Were you to marry one wife, there would then be a pair, and you might fear that your destiny would oppose some ob- stacle; but now, since you marry tuo, there THE TWIN SISTERS. 149 will be one more than a pair, and this will agree very well with the prediction. It would appear from this, that such was its very intention, and therefore you need not apprehend a recurrence of your former misfortune.'' When he had done speaking, the whole number of persons present expressed their approbation, saying, that the decision of the judge this day had, as it were, created a new destiny for Sze-tsin, and that the ex- planation he had given was admirable. They advised Sze-tsin to relinquish his per- tinacity, and return thanks to the judge, with the two ladies. Sze-tsin therefore had no alternative : he was obhged to yield. Standing up before the judge, in company with the two ladies, they all bowed down four times before their benefactor. Sze-tsin then called for 150 THE TWIN SISTERS. his horse, and accompanied the two orna- mented sedans home. When he was gone, the inferior rewards were distributed. All those who had wit- nessed the good fortune of Sze-tsin ex- claimed, " that the happiness of the im- mortal gods was not superior to his. The regard of the judge for talent and merit had caused it all. At this examination, three only had succeeded, but the fourth was a mere pretender, and it was just that he who had helped him should have the reward.'' Some time after, Sze-tsin was promoted to higher literary rank. The name of the judge became celebrated in consequence of his decision, until it reached the court, when the emperor called him to Peking, and gave him a situation in the Mihtary Tribunal. Sze-tsin was advanced to a [)lace in the Literary College, and continued to THE TWIN SISTERS. 151 live with his friend the judge on the terms of father and son. The ancient saying is very true, that " none but the worthy can discern the worthy.'' THE THREE DEDICATED CHAMBERS A TALE. TRANSLATED FROM THE CHINESE. Let observation, with extensive view, Survey mankind from China to Peru ; Remark each anxious toil, each eager strife — Vanity of Human Wishes. Note. The following Tale (for it can hardly be called a novel) has been already printed, but never yet given to the public in a regular shape. For the reasons which produced this revised Translation, see Obser- vations, 8cc. (p. 12.) The story is here taken at its actual commencement, and a tedious introduction omitted. The unnecessary recurrence of Chinese names has also been avoided. THE THREE DEDICATED CHAMBERS. SECTION I. During the reign of the twelfth Emperor, of the Ming dynasty, in a district of the pro- vince of Sze-chuen, there hved a rich man, who was hkely in time to be still richer. This person, whose name was Tang-yo-chuen, had an immense quantity of land. When- ever he got any money, it was his delight to add to his landed possessions ; but he would neither build houses, nor would he supply himself with any of the comforts or necessa- ries of life, beyond what was absolutely in- dispensable. His disposition was to enrich himself by every means in his power, and 156 THE THREE his property increased daily, like the moon towards the full. Houses and furniture (he thought) were not only unprofitable, but there was always a fear lest the god of fire should destroy them, and they might in one moment become annihilated. If one had fine garments, there immediately came un- pleasant fellows to borrow clothes. If there was plenty to eat, one soon had j)eople claiming acquaintance, and taking their seats in quest of food. In short, there was nothing like being contented with coarse articles, for people in that case would not be seeking them. He laid fast hold of this notion, and Avas determined to take care of his money. But not contented with being niggardly, he wished to assume credit to himself lor it, and said that he was descended iVoni one of the most ancient emperors, and that his ancestors were celebrated for their economy. DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 157 The father being thus parsimonious, his son was bound to obey his precepts. When people saw the avarice of the former, they observed, that there was an ancient pro- verb, which said, that " if a man was a great miser, he would certainly have a pro- digal son." He must inevitably have a suc- cessor Avho would turn things upside down; so that Tang-yo-chuen^s disposition to save was not likely to descend. To their sur- prise, however, the son imitated his father. From his earliest years he devoted himself to letters, seeking preferment by every means in his power, and soon became a scholar of the third degree. In his eating and drinking he did not seek for luxury; in his clothes he wished not for a super- abundance; and in his pleasures he was very sparing. It was only on the subject of houses that he differed ; for there he was not contented wdth economy. Being ashamed of the dwelling which 158 THE THREE they now inhabited, he wished to build a better one, but was afraid to begin, lest the means should not be forthcoming. Having heard people say, " that to buy an old house was better than to build a new one,'' he observed, in a consultation on the subject with his father, that if they could purchase a handsome dwelling, fit for them to live in, they might then think of a gar- den, and build a library in it, to suit their own taste. As the father had an object* in humouring his son, he deviated on this oc- casion from his usual maxims. He replied, " There is no necessity to be in a hurry; we shall have a handsome house and garden in this very street. The house is not yet completed, but the day of its being fmished * When a man in China attains to high litorarv rank, certain honours are conferred on his f'tit/icr. A I long merchant at Canton, whose son was a member of the Imperial College, hail the privilege of erecting certain poles or masts in his grounds, indicative of the favour of the emperor. DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 159 must infallibly be the day of its sale; so let us wait a while/' The son observed in answer to this, that " when people wanted to sell houses, they did not often build ; when they built houses, they did not often intend to sell them. Where, then, was the probability of this house being sold as soon as it was completed.'' The father replied, " Pray where did you get that crochet? If a man possesses ten thousand pieces of money, he may build a house which costs him only one thousand : but if his possessions in houses equal one half of his whole fortune, he may be compared to a large tree with- out a root, which must inevitably be blown down when the wind comes. Then how much more may this fellow, who, without possessing an hundred acres in land, builds all at once a house with a thousand rooms, be called a tree without a root ! He will not l60 THE THREE wait for the wind's blowing, but will tum- ble down of himself There cannot be a doubt about it/' When the son had heard this reasoning, he agreed with his father. He went about seeking for land, and said nothing more concerning houses. He was impatient, however, that the abovementioned house should be built, in order that, the present owner being gone, the finishing stroke might be given by himself. The rich man's plan proved successful: the result justified his prediction. There are two lines of the Book of Odes which are appli- cable to the case. " The nest one bird constructs with anxious toil, Ere long another seizes as her spoil." He who was building the mansion was named Yu-soo-chin. He delighltHl in amusing himself witli books of poetrv, and DEDICATED CHAMBERS. l6l fancy, but did not seek eminence as a scholar. From the indolence of his dispo- sition, he had a great aversion from any office, and was not born to be a mandarin. He therefore detached his thoughts from a great name, and gave himself entirely up to odes and wine; by which means he could not but be reduced to beggary. During his whole life he had scarcely any other delight than in arranging and building gardens and summer-houses. From the beginning of the year to the end, not a day passed without his doing something in this way. He was desirous that the place about which he was now engaged, should be quite perfect, and superior to the com- mon order of things. He said, " Let other men have their numerous acres : ostentation and riches were the concerns of others : on him they had no influence." There were only three things in which he really felt in- M l62 THE THREE tercsted, and which he was determined to have of the best. These were, the house which he inhabited in the day, the bed in which he slept at night, and the coffin which was to contain him when dead. Having these ideas in his breast,* he went on with his work, and laboured at it in an indefati stable manner. Tang-yo-chuen's son, having waited se- .veral years without seeing him come to a conclusion, began to feel somewhat vexed and irritated, and said to his father, " AMiy have we delayed in vain for such a length of time.? That man's house is not yet finished, nor is his money yet expended. It would seem from this, that he is a I'cllow of ways and means; and the point ol" liis selling it hereafter appears tt) be somewhat * The ChiiK'sc suppose that thi' abdoincii is the seat of ideas. DEDICATED CHAMBERS. l63 doubtful/^ To this Tang-yo-chuen replied, " Every day later makes it a day more certain, and each succeeding day will make it more advantageous for us. There is no occasion for you to fret about it. The reason why his house is not finished, is simply this. When any part is completed, it does not suit his ideas of perfection, and he must take it to pieces to build over again. If it is excellent, he seeks for still higher excellence ; so that of every day, during which it is delayed, the alterations and improvements are wholly for our own advantage. The reason why his resources are not yet expended, is the willingness of the usurers and the workmen to give him credit, as long as he goes on building. The labourers do not sue him for their claims, because they fancy that by every addi- tional day of work, they may get a day^s wages ; while, if they were to press him M 2 164 THE TIIllEE hard, he would certainly stop the building for a while, and they would get no employ- ment. It is thus that his money is not yet expended ; but this may be called ' taking flesh to feed an ulcer/ Do not be afraid that he is possessed of ways and means. Having arrived at the period when he can draw together no more, those who have him in their books will certainly press him in a body, and begin to curse him. lie will then seek, in the first place, to sell what he has in land : but as that will not suffice to pay them, he must inevitably have recourse to his house. If he be"ins to collect now, at an early period, and before his debts are very large, he may stay for a good price before he sells it. Our right plan will be to wait until a later day, m hen his debts are a little increased, and anxious to sell, he will be willing to come down with his terms. Tliis is all c^xactiv as we DEDICATED CHAMBERS. l65 should wish it; why, then, go and obsti- nately torment yourself?" The son, when he had heard this, ap- plauded and acquiesced in his father^s sen- timents. Indeed, after a few years, Yu- soo-chin's debts gradually accumulated, and his creditors came daily to his doors to claim them; and there were some who would not go away again. The house which he had so long been building, could not be completed ; and he at last wanted to seek a man who would buy it. All those who are selling houses, are dif- ferently circumstanced from the venders of lands. They must naturally desire to find out a purchaser in some neighbouring or contiguous situation ; for should a person from a distance wish to buy, he will make enquiries of those in the neighbourhood. If the neighbours utter a word of disadvan- tage, he who before was desirous to pur- 166 THE THREE chase, will be unwilling to do it. Not like lands, or any other property, concerning which people are less particular. There- fore in selling a house, it is certainly de- sirable to sell it to a neighbour. Tang-yo-chuen was a wealthy man, and since it was as well not to trifle with him, the owner of the house of course w^ent to offer it to him first. Both father and son, though at their hearts they greedily coveted it, merely returned for answer, " that they did not want it." They waited until he in- treated them earnestly, and then went over — just to give a look. Pretending not to admire it, they observed, " that he had built it but indiflbrently. The apartments were not suited to a private gentleman, and the winding avenues would only impede business. The fine carved doors, when they were required to keep out thieves, would have no strength. Rooms, which DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 16? should be different, were all alike. The ground and the air were very damp. It certainly could not sell for much. The flowers and bamboo shrubberies were like plantations of mulberry and hemp. Those who came to saunter here must be served with wine and eatables. Such a place as this Avas fit only to be turned into a nun- nery,* or a residence for the priests of Fo. If one wished to make family apartments for one's children, it would never answer.'" Yu-soo-chin might be said to have spent his heart's blood upon it, and when he per- ceived that it met with nothing but disap- probation and contempt, was not altogether pleased. However, since this man was the * There are receptacles in China for the religious of both sexes, who devote themselves to celibacy. The strange and unaccountable resemblance, which many of the leading tenets of the religion of Fo bear to those of the Roman Catholic church, led the Jesuits to assert, that the devil had invented them in spite. 168 THE TIIKEE only person who was likely to buy the house, it was as well not to quarrel with him. The people present advised Tang-yo- chuen not to say too much against it. The price was not altogether high; and even though he took it to pieces, and built it over again, it would pay for the workmen and their maintenance. The father and son of course praised and dispraised it, still they brought it down to an exceeding low price : not above one fifth of its real value. Yu-soo-chin had no alternative, and nmst endure the pain of selling it. Every thing was delivered over in the bonds, with the exception of one set of apartments, which had occupied his whole life, and m hich he had brought exactly to suit his own taste. These he would not insert in the deeds, but wished to build a partition wall, and make a separate entrance, that he might inhabit them until his death. 'l)EDICATED CHAMBERS. l69 The son was for decidedly compelling him to sell the whole together, in order that it might be complete. His father seemed to agree with the rest of the people. Screw- ing up his mouth, he exclaimed, " Let him sell it or not, as he pleases : it is a pity to force him. He merely wishes to keep this small shred,* that it may be the means of his recovering the property hereafter, when he has improved his circumstances. It will then revert to its original master, which will be a very good thing."' When the people present heard this, they all said it was the speech of a benevolent man. They little knew that it was far otherwise ; that it was altogether the language of contempt! * There is some law existing in China, that if a man in selling his property, retain but a small portion of it, he is entitled to receive back the whole, if hereafter his improved circumstances will allow of his redeeming it. This observation may serve to explain his motive in wish- ing to retain this shred. 170 THE THREE He concluded that it could never be re- covered, and therefore left him this shred. Indeed it was quite useless, and the whole must inevitably become one house, sooner or later. They listened to his requisition, and entirely acquiescing with him in words, they divided the property, of which the new owner obtained nine parts, and the old possessor one. The apartments, which Yu-soo-chin re- tained, were in the style of a Pagoda, con- sisting altogether of three stories. In each chamber was a tablet, Avritten upon by some person of rank and eminence, with whom he was acquainted. In the lowest room were carved lattices, crooked railings, bamboo seats, and tlower stands. It was the place where he received his guests. On the tablet were inscribctl large charac- ters to this effect, DEDICATED TO MEN. DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 171 The chamber in the middle story was adorned with bright tables and clear win- dows, together with pictures and other fur- niture. This was his study, where he was accustomed to read and write. On the tablet was largely inscribed, DEDICATED TO THE ANCIENTS. The highest chamber was empty and light. There was nothing in it, besides a chafing dish for incense, and a sacred book. It was here that he retreated from the crowd, retired from noise, and shut himself up in complete solitude. On the front of the tablet in this chamber was written, in large characters, DEDICATED TO HEAVEN. Having divided the building into com- partments for these three different uses, he likewise took them unitedly, and formed a tablet, calling them, THE THREE DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 172 THE THREE Before he had parted with the rest of his property, those three appellations, though well chosen, had still been vainly applied, since he had not made use of the apart- ments. The lowest chamber only could be excepted, for as he was exceedingly fond of entertaining guests, and if a person came from a distance to visit him, immediately placed a bed in it, the appellation of " De- dicated to Men'' was certainly applicable. As to the two upper chambers, he had hardly been in them. But now, since his summer houses were gone, besides the chamber " Dedicated to the Ancients,'' he had no place in which he could read or write; and except that " Dedicated to Heaven," none to which he could retire from noise, or retreat iVom the crowd. All the day long he sat in them, and the names which he had dictated became truly apph- DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 173 cable. He now fully understood that a great deal might be effected in a small and con- fined residence, and that it was better to despise the name, and adhere to the reality. These four popular lines are not inappli- cable. " Lord of ten thousand acres, flowering fair, A few small morsels quell thy appetite ; A thousand spreading roofs demand thy care. And lo ! six feet suffice thee every night !" The strength which he possessed had hitherto been dissipated in vain. He now applied his inventive genius collectively at a single point, and caused his dwelling to be decorated to an extraordinary degree. Residing in it, Yu-soo-chin not only forgot the misery of parting with his garden, being in fact very much relieved by the absence of that burthen, but also remained secure from a violent neighbour at his side. 174 THE THREE How he could live unmolested in this habi- tation will be shewn in the next section. SECTION II. When Tang-yo-chuen and his son had purchased their new residence, the rich man's taste unfortunately proved quite dif- ferent from that of the former owner, and he wanted to alter it once again. But there was no necessity to take it to pieces, or to change the main parts of the struc- ture. It was like some beautiful landsca})e, where the only thing requisite was to add a blade of grass, or take away a tree. The a})[)carancc of it did not suit his idea of a picture. AV hen lie had worked at il lor a time, he found tluit \\c had dcpnitcd Iroui his original puisuil of turning iron into DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 175 gold, and contrary to his expectation, was turning gold into iron. The persons who came to view it, agreed in saying that " the pleasure-ground was large and unsuitable, and that, after all, it was not to be compared with the Three Chambers ; — though if they were both united, it would be well enough. It was no wonder (they added) that the other retained the small part, and despised the large one: or that he held it tenaciously and refused to sell it. The partition turned out to be one inch of gold and ten cubits of iron.'' Both the father and son, when they heard these observations, became very sorry, and repentant of the bargain : and they then learned that a man may be rich, without being altogether satisfied. They applied to the brokers, and going over to annoy their neighbour, required that he should insert the Three Chambers in the deeds, 176 THE THREE and give the whole over to them. Yii-soo- chin, since selHng the pleasure-ground, had employed no workmen, and had not been at all extravagant. As his debts were all paid, and he was short neither of money nor food, what should make him wish to sell his property ? He therefore said to them in answer, " Tell me where I should repose myself, when this habitation was gone? — but I will still hold out, though you try to starve me into compliance with your demands." As his circumstances im- proved, he became more and more deter- mined in his resolution. The brokers came over, and talked on the subject with the son. The latlcr could not hel]) taking his father to task, and telhng him, that " Though he luul been all his life studying mankind, he seemed, on this occasion, for once to have been (piite mistaken." The father replied " 'I'hat fel- DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 177 low may be as determined as he pleases during his life-time, but he will be very quiet when he is dead. He is now an old man, and without heirs. When the breath is out of his body, his whole household must inevitably revert to strangers, and doubtless the Three Chambers among the rest. All his property will become our own ; there is no fear of its flying away up to heaven.^' The son, when he had heard thus far, rephed, that " Though all this might be very true, yet the man's duration seemed to be without a limit ; it was im- possible to wait for his demise ; and the sooner they obtained possession of his house, the better."' From this time, they made Yu-soo-chin the chief subject of their thoughts ; and though they imprecated his death heartily, they rather hoped that his ruin would anticipate that event : for they still thought that it would be impossible for N 178 THE THREE him to hold out, when his food and raiment had failed him. Who could have conceived, that when men had such virtuous wishes, heaven would not comply with them ! He continued to live on prosperously, in spite of all their hopes and imprecations. Indeed he seemed to grow stronger, as he became older. Neither was he troubled witli a want of clothes, nor did his subsistence fail him ; and he had no necessity to sell his Three Chambers. Tang-yo-chuen and his son were vexed and enraged beyond measure, and after having deliberated on the next plan to l)e pursued, they applied to the brokers, in- sisting that Yu-soo-chin should redeem back what they had purchased. " Two families,'' said they, " cannot live in the same premises. Exalted on high in his Three Chambers, he looks down upon our DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 179 dwelling; and is able to see into our private rooms, while his own are secure from our view. This is an unequal bargain, and will never answer/^ Yu-soo-chin was informed of what they said ; but he knew very well that their wish to be off the bargain was all feigned, and that the real truth was, they greedily de- sired to get possession of the whole. He therefore repeated what he had said before, and returned a very sharp and decisive answer. Both father and son were of course ex- ceedingly angry, and it now onl}^ remained for them to oppress him with the Manda- rines power. They made out a document, announcing in open court their wish to undo the bargain ; hoping, that by a little bribery, they might be able to buy over and manage that officer, and through his assistance obtain the whole property. N 2 180 THE THREE They were little aware that the person, with Avhom they had to deal, was incorrup- tible ; that he had formerly been a poor and obscure scholar, and was oppressed and insulted by a wealthy man. He said to them " This is a very poor person : how then is it possible for him to redeem it? Your's is evidently a plot to ruin and de- vour him. You are people of property, and wish to be rich, rather than virtuous : it is my business, as a magistrate, to be vir- tuous, rather than rich."' Then in open court, he rebuked them for a while, and tearing up the deed, turned them both out. Yu-soo-chin had an old and very worthy friend. He was a person from a distant part of the country, and one who possessed great wealth. It was his delight to expend his riches in performing acts of kindness. Happening one day to come and commmsc with Yu-soo-chin, he observed that he hail DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 181 sold his garden and pavilion ; and heaved a deep sigh. When he found, also, that people had been plotting against him, and that he could not live unmolested even in this little nest, but might hereafter be com- pelled to yield it up entirely, he offered im- mediately to produce the money, and re- deem the whole back for his friend. The latter was a man of a most inde- pendent spirit. He would not merely avoid being indebted to another for some hun- dreds or thousands ; but if one had offered him the smallest sum, without at the same time proving that he had a claim to it, he would have . declined the acceptance. Having heard what his friend had to say, he observed, that " his warm-heartedness was all in vain, and that he was mistaken in his view^ of the subject. The possessions of this world w^ere altogether transitory, and never remained for many generations in 182 THE THREE the same family. A man might take good care of them during his hfe time ; but there was no securing them after death. Though now (said he) you interest yourself in my cause, and would advance large sums of money to redeem a portion of my property, yet I cannot live be3^ond a few years, and some day hence, when I die without heirs, every brick and tile must revert to strangers. Though now, from a generous motive, 3'ou are willing to make light of your money, I am afraid you cannot assist me hereafter. Though now, alas ! you may redeem for me my former possessions, wait till a little while hence, and you cannot be of any service to my ghost!" The friend, per- ceiving this to be his mode of thinking, was unwilling to press him farther. He lodged with Yu-soo-chin for several nights in the Three Chambers, and when he took leave on his return home, addressed DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 183 him thus, previous to commencing his jour- ney. " While I was reposing at night in the lowest chamber, I observed a white rat, which ran about for a while, and then quickly darted into the floor. This cir- cumstance is, no doubt, indicative of some wealth being concealed there. Do not on any account part with this house, for you may chance hereafter to dig up some treasure ; at least such is my idea.'' Yu- soo-chin laughed at this as a mere joke, and having thanked his friend, they sepa- rated. The old saying, that '' No unlocked for wealth ever fell to him, who was destined to be poor,'' is a very true one. The pur- chasers of houses are the only people who dig up hidden treasures ; no seller of his property ever yet found a single brass coin in his own ground. Yu-soo-chin knew this, and was too wise to entertain any such 184 THE THREE visions. He tlierefore replied to his friend's observation with a cold laugh, and did not begin to rout up the bricks and dig the earth. Tang-yo-chuen and his son, since they had experienced the Mandarin's wrath, Avere as much abashed, as they had before been vexed and angry. However, they were more busy than ever with their plots, and lived in hope that their neighbour would soon die; that he would soon become a childless ghost; for they might then enter his house with a good face. Who could have conceived, that when a rich man had been right in all his conjee- tures, there should still be the two circum- stances of life and death, which would not acknowledge his controul! Their ncii>h- bour not only contined to live on, but when he had arrived at upwards of sixty years, seemed to grow young again, and was DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 185 fortunate enough to have a son born to him. The Three Chambers were immediately crowded with congratulatory guests, who all exclaimed, that " now the whole pro- perty must be redeemed !" Tang-yo-chuen and his son, when they heard of the unlucky event, were very much disturbed. They were before only afraid of not obtaining the remaining portion, but their appre- hension now was, that they should lose the whole: — and they were anxious beyond measure on the subject. After the lapse of a month, several brokers came to them unexpectedly, saying, that their neighbour, after the birth of his son, had been reduced to poverty by his guests, who had completely eaten him up. He had now no other means of subsistence left, than to sell the house in which he was living. The cards of sale were already 186 THE TUREE issued, and the bills pasted on the doors. They ought to seize this opportunity, and pounce upon it as quickly as possible/' On hearing this, both father and son were transported with joy; which was only allayed by the fear, that he would remem- ber and hate them for past circumstances ; chusing to sell it to some other person, in preference to having any dealings with them. They were not aware, that his way of thinking was quite different from their own. " The descendants of our two families (said he) are peculiarly circumstanced with res- pect to one another. His remote ancestor conferred the Empire on mine, who had nothing to give in return. Now, since the obligation has descended to the posterity, it would be nothing more than what was right, were I to give him this small property as a present; I may surely, then, let him DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 187 have it for a price. I will not, for the little resentments of these days, obliterate the memory of former favours. Let him not be anxious on the subject, but trust to me to fix a moderate price for it, and deliver it over into his possession.^' Tang-yo-chuen, when he heard of this, was happy beyond measure ; as was also his son. The former said, " I always de- lighted in dwelling on my ancestors, and have ever experienced their favourable in- fluence. Had it not been for their ancient generosity, I should never have obtained this elegant residence. It is thus that men may rejoice in having had virtuous fore- fathers."' He then went over with the bro- kers, and settled the bargain. Though his disposition had always been to seek for an advantage on such occasions, yet since old things had been brought forward, he was willing for once to practise a little liberality . 188 THE THREE His neighbour, on the other hand, did not higgle about it, but imitated the generosity of Tang-yo-chuen's ancestor, who had given up his throne and his kingdom, and sought some thatched cottage, where he might hve in retirement. There were a few honest friends, who could not bring themselves to justify Yu- soo-chin. They said to him, " AVhen you had your house, why did you not sell it to any body rather than to him who en- vied and plotted against you? lie has now succeeded, and both the father and son will go about to every one, chattering and ex- ulting. As long as you were without an heir, you would not abate in your resent- ment. Since you were so fortunate as to obtain one, he might have proved the means of recovering back the whole property; and even though you had not recovered it, that whicli remained to you was suihcient. DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 189 Why then did you deliver over the last remnant of your possessions to that man ?" Yu-soo-chin, having heard what they had to say, smiled, and replied, " Your in- tentions, gentlemen, are very good ; but you regard merely what is before your eyes, without considering the hereafter : I judge that his plots will eventually benefit me. In order to redeem back the whole property, I must have waited until my son was grown up, when it might have been possible to recover it. But I am an old man, and conceive that I cannot live so long ; and who can tell, whether, after my death, my son would not have sold the Three Chambers to Tang-yo-chuen ? Hav- ing at length succeeded in getting it from the son, he would have laughed at, and abused the memory of the father. It is better that the father should sell the pro- perty, and then people will compassionate and assist the son. 190 THE THREE "The above, however, might not have been the worst evil. It is ten thousand to one, that I should very soon have died, while my son was yet an infant. My wife, being content to strive with hunger, would not have parted with the property to our enemy. He, seeing that the new would not come into his hands, and fearing, also, that the old might be redeemed, would certainly have laid plots to cut off my heir. Thus I am fearful, that not only the pro- perty would have been lost, but my son sacrificed besides. This indeed might be called a loss ! By selling it cheap to him now, I have merely made a kind of de- posit, and caused him to incur a debt, which will be paid into the hands of my son. If he does not pay it, I think it pos- sible that others will. The old proverb says, ' To endure injuries is the sure policy.'" When llicy had heard this, his I'riends, DEDICATED CHAMBERS. IQl though they were somewhat startled by his reasons, still maintained their former opi- nion. The old man died suddenly, a very few years after he had sold his whole pro- perty, and left his son, a child, under the protection of his widow, who possessed scarcely any thing. Their sole reliance was on the price which had been obtained for the house, and which produced a little interest, just enough to subsist upon. Tang-yo-chuen's possessions became every day greater. He knew how to make money, and his son knew how to take care of it. Every thing came in ; nothing went out; and the property which he had bought seemed so secure, that it might last for a thousand years. Every one arraigned the wisdom of Heaven, saying, that " the descendants of those persons, who had been liberal and just, possessed httle or nothing; while the 192 THE THREE progeny of those, who had enriched them- seh^es by unworthy means, were so well off." The saying of the ancients, however, is very true, that " when virtue and vice have arrived at their full, they must finally be recompensed; the onl}" difference being, whether sooner or later/' These words are constantly in men's mouths, but leave very little impression on their hearts. Though the recompense come late, it is the same thing as if it came early; and indeed his lot, who waits for his punishment, is the worst. The subject of late or early recompenses very much resembles laying out money, and receiving back the interest. If you receive it one day sooner, you receive one day's less interest: if you leave it lor a year longer, you get a year's additional interest. Should you look for the reward of vour good deeds with an anxious heart, Heaven DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 193 may not immediately send it, and it may seem as if no reward awaited you. But when you have lost all expectation, and given up the hope, the recompense will suddenly arrive ; like a bad debt of many years' standing, which, when the lender has forgotten it, comes unexpectedly to his door, with an exceeding large accumulation of interest. This is far better than an early payment. When Yu-soo-chin's son, who was called Ke-woo, had reached the age of seventeen or eighteen, he soon acquired a literary title. He was created governor of a dis- trict, and being called to court, ^vas after- wards raised to a still higher office. As he was a person who dared to speak in the cause of rectitude, he became a great favourite with the reigning Emperor. At length, when his mother became old, he requested leave to retire and take care o 194 THE THRKE of her. Makinsf the best of his \\ av home, and being as yet some miles from it, he perceived a woman, not much more than twenty, with a paper in her hand, kneeling by the way side, and exclaiming to him aloud, " I intreat, sir, that you will receive and examine this/' Ke-woo told her to come into the boat,* and taking the docu- ment from her, looked at it. It turned out to be a deed, or bond, in the name of her husband, who desired, with his family and effects, to come under his protection, and become his slaves.f- Ke-woo said to her, * Almost all journeys are performed in China hv water. The British Embassy of 18U), of w hich the translator was a member, travelled a distance of about 1'2CK) miles, aloni; canals and navigable rivers. •\- "It is to be observed, that the slavery, whieh is re- cognized and tolerated by the laws of China, is a mild species of servitnde, and perhaps not very ilcgradin*; in a country, in which no condition of life appears to admit of any considerable degree of personal liberty and inde- pcmh'nre." — Slaiinto»\s ]*c)}iil Code, p. '2*)'>. ttolc. DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 195 " If I may judge by your appearance, you are of a respectable family, why do you wish to throw yourselves under my protec- tion ? How happens it, too, that your husband does not shew himself, instead of permitting you, a woman, to come to the road side, and cry out aloud?'* The woman replied, " We are the descent dants of an ancient family; but my father- in-law, while he lived, being very fond of buying lands, unceasingly endeavoured to add to his stock every acre of ground, and every house, which adjoined to his own. Those persons, who sold to him their property, did not part with it wiUingly, but each of them hated him in his heart. Before my father-in-law died, they hap- pened, in the first place, to be favourable times, which prevented him from breaking in upon his wealth: secondly, he was a person of some rank and influence, and if o 2 196 THE THREE a magistrate had any charge against him, it became necessary only to spend a httle money, in order to live unmolested. At length, the favourable times no longer existed, and before the expiration of half a year, my father-in-law died, ^ly husband was young, and moreover possessed no rank. The persecutors of the orphan and widow rushed upon him in a body, and all went before the magistrate with accusations against him: so that, within a year, he ex- perienced a great many different charges, and the larger half of his property was expended. But a still worse evil has since befallen him. He is in prison; and money alone will not release him. The only hope of his liberation rests on the zealous inter- ference of some person of influence, and yourself are the only one to whom we can look on this occasion. Besides, sii', the business, in wliicli mv husl)an{l is iuAohcd, DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 197 has considerable relation to you; and though he seems the only person con- cerned, it may yet be considered as your own cause. He therefore wrote this docu- ment, and desired me to come and throw ourselves under your protection, offering to you both our property and our personal services, and only intreating, that you will not consider them as worthless, but accept of them without delay .^' Ke-woo was at a loss to express his surprise on hearing the above, and asked her, *' Pray what may the business be, in which you are involved, and which has so much concern with myself? Doubtless during my absence from home, my house- hold have been getting into mischief, and in conjunction with you and your husband produced this evil. Do you wish me to identify myself with a parcel of strangers, and, by aftbrding them my countenance 198 THE THREE and protection, incur criminality through an unjust stretch of power ?" The woman repUed, " This is by no means the case. In the midst of our pro- perty is a tall building, called ' the Three Dedicated Chambers,' which originally be- longed, sir, to your family, but was after- wards sold to us. We lived there for several years without molestation ; until some unknown enemy lately presented an anonymous petition, stating, ' that my hus- band was one of a nest of robbers, and that the three generations, from grandfather to grandson, were all rogues : that twenty pieces of treasure were now deposited under the Three Chambers, and that when the hoard was taken up, the particulars would be understood.' AVhen the magis- trate had seen this document, he (juietly sent some thief-takers forward to raise up the hoard ; and contrary to all expectation, DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 199 they certainly produced from under the flooring, twenty pieces of treasure. My husband was immediately apprehended, and taken to the magistrate's court. He was pointed out as a harbourer of thieves, and severely tortured and beat, with a view that he might discover his associates, toge- ther with the rest of the spoil which they might have taken. " My husband endeavoured, as well as he could, to solve this extraordinary affair; but was unable to get at the truth. Far from having any claim to the treasure which had been discovered, he knew not whence it had flo\vTi thither. Being igno- rant of every circumstance connected with it, we were unable to unravel the mystery ; but might still rejoice that no one appeared to have lost it. The magistrate committed my husband to prison on suspicion, but has not yet decided on his crime. My 200 THE THREE husband considered the subject minutely, and thought it probable, that as our house and grounds formerly belonged to your family, your grandfather might have de- posited the treasure in the floor, and your father, ignorant of the circumstance, never removed it. Hence, that which should have been a profitable thing, turned out to be a source of misfortune. " We do not wish to enquire into the truth of this point, but only intreat, sir, that you will claim the money as your own. AVhen the money is thus disposed of, my husband will be restored from death to life, and as your interference will be the cause of this, our whole property should be pre- sented to you in recompense. The house and grounds, which were constructed by your father with such j)ains and labour, have a particular claim to be restored to you, and we therefore intreat, sir, that you will not reject them." DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 201 Ke-woo, hearing this, could not help suspecting that something was wrong. He said to her in answer, " My family have made it a maxim of old, to refuse all such ojfFers. There is no occasion to speak now about 3^our throwing yourselves under my protection. It is true that the house and grounds were formerly possessed by my family; but they were regularly sold, with all the forms of brokers and deeds, and were not conjured awa}^ by your relations. If I want them again, therefore, I must pay the original price for them, and there is no reason why you should give them back to me for nothing. As to the treasure, I have no concern with it whatever, and cannot with any propriety lay claim to it. Go now, and wait until I have had an inter- view with the magistrate. I will request him to investigate the subject with care, as it is highly necessary to have a clear deci- 202 THE THREE sion. Should the charges be proved to be untrue, your husband will of course be released from prison, and certainly will not be put to death unjustly/' When the woman had heard this, she rejoiced exceedingly, and returning him ten thousand thanks, took her departure. The source, whence these misfortunes arose, and the manner in which they wcie after- wards got the better of, are explained in the third and last section. SECTION 111. Kk-woo, after his interview with the woman, made the best of his way home. lie then fancied himself to be the examin- ing magistrate, and considered the subject in different lights, saying to himself, " Not to mention that this treasure cannot \)c the j)atrimony of my ancestors, yet allowing DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 203 that it were so, how came I, their descend^ ant, to know nothing about it, nor my kindred to contend for its possession ? On the contrary, it was a person out of the family who knew of it, and who presented a petition on the subject. As this petition was without a name, it is plain that he must be an enemy ; — I have no doubt about it. At the same time, supposing that he had some cause of enmity, it was not well to charge the other with such a vile act, and to point him out as a harbourer of thieves. Then, again, at the time of taking up the treasure, the petitioner's words were veri- fied, and it answered exactly to the amount specified in the document, without being either more or less. It is difficult to con- ceive that he, who presented the petition, for the sake of gratifying a secret enmity, should be willing to risk such a vast sum, and having placed it in another's ground. 204 THE THREE proceed to carry on so extraordinary a business." He considered it for several days, but could make nothing of the matter. It was the constant subject of his thoughts, and during his sleep, and in his dreams, he cried out and muttered broken sentences. His mother, hearing him, enquired the reason of this ; and he then recounted to her minutely what the woman had said to him. On first hearing it, his mother, too, was very much perplexed, but having con- sidered it awhile, discovered the truth, and exclaimed " It must be so, indeed ! This treasure does certainly belong to our family ; and the man was right enough in his con- jectures. When your father was alive, he had a friend who came from a distance to see him. This friend remained lor seviMal niirhts in the lowest of the Three Dedicated Chambers, and perceived (he saiti) a wliile DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 205 rat, which ran about for a while, and then darted into the floor. At the time of his departure, he spoke to your father, desiring him by no means to sell the apartments, since he might hereafter find some unlook- ed for treasure. By all appearances, this treasure has now come to light. Your father, by not searching for it, made it a cause of misfortune to others : do you, therefore, go and claim it, and thereby save the man's life." Her son replied, " There is something more to be said on the subject. An idle story like this is not fit for the mouth of a respectable person, and when I talk about a white rat to the magistrate, he will pro- bably suspect that I covet that large sum of money, and, unwilling to claim it openly, have trumped up this story, in order to im- pose upon simple people. Besides, neither was this white rat seen by my father, nor 206 THE THREE was this foolish story related by him. The more I consider it, the more ridiculous does it appear. It may indeed be called the dream of a fool. If the treasure were the property of our family, my father should have seen those indications; or how hap- pened it that, instead of appearing to me, they were perceived by a stranger? The whole story is false; it is impossible to be- lieve it. Still, however, we ought to con- sult with the magistrate, with a view to clearing up this mysterious business, and saving a guiltless w^retch. This Mill be act- ing a correct and virtuous part." As he had done speaking, a servant sud- denly announced that the magistrate had arrived, to pay his respects. Ke-woo said, " I was just now wishing to sec him: re- questhim to walk in innnediatelv." When the magistrate had made his bow, and talked a little on general subjects, he did DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 207 not wait until Ke-woo began the subject of the mystery, but took it up himself, and re- quested to hear all that he knew about it, saying, that *' the person in whose house the hoard had been found, although re- peatedly and strictly examined, had disco- vered nothing. He yesterday" (said he) " made a deposition, stating, that the place where the treasure had been taken up be- longed formerly to your family, and that therefore it must have been left by your ancestors. I accordingly came here, in the first place, to pay my respects, and se- condly, to request your information on the subject, being quite ignorant of the truth." Ke-woo replied, " My family has for se- veral successive generations been very poor, nor did my immediate predecessors accumulate any thing in money. It would therefore be rash in me to lay claim to this treasure, by which means I should acquire 208 THE THREE a bad name. There must be somethins; in this affair which we do not understand ; nor is it necessary to assert that it is a hoard accumulated by a nest of thieves. I there- fore entreat, sir, that you will continue a strict investigation, and effect a decision of this doubtful business. Should you be able to bring the crime home to the prisoner, then well and good." The magistrate said, " When your father departed this life,* though you, sir, were still a child, and therefore, perhaps, not very well acquainted with Ibrmer circum- stances; yet may we not ask your mother if, belbre the property was disposed of, she cither saw or heard of any thing par- ticular?" ile replied, " 1 have aheady interrogated * The Chinese havt- a siiperstitious ilnail of mention- ing death in dirert ti-rnis. Thi' ox|)rt'ssion in the orij^inal is " to pass over to inunorlalilv, or bcconii' iinnuntal." DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 209 my mother, but she talks somewhat at ran- dom, and my father never mentioned a word on the subject. As I am now con- versing with you on business, it would be improper to repeat any thing unadvisedly. I will therefore keep it to myself" The magistrate insisted on his telling it out: but Ke-woo was determined to say nothing. His mother w^as fortunately standing be- hind the screen, and wishing sincerely to do a good action, desired her steward to go and recount the story in question for his master. AVhen the magistrate had heard it, he considered silently for a time, and then said to the steward, " I will trouble you to go in again, and ask, where is the residence of him who saw the white rat; whether he is at present alive or dead; whether his family is rich or poor; on what terms of intimacy your master lived with him ; and if they were in the habit of rendering p 210 THE THREE each other mutual assistance. I have to request that your lady will speak with pre- cision, as the present day's en([uiry may serve in the place of a formal trial, and this obscure case be happily cleared up." The steward went in for a while, and coming back, answered, " My mistress says that the person who saw the w^hite rat came from a considerable distance, and lived in such and such a district. He is yet alive, and his fortune is very large. He is a per- son of great worth, who sets a small value on riches, and lived on terms of strictest friendship with my former master. Seeing that he had sold his pleasure ground, and that he would be compelled to part m ith his Three Chambers, he wished to produce the money, and redeem the whole for him. As my master would not consent, his friend pressed him no I'arther. The ^\()^cls in ([ucstion are those which he utlercd al llic DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 211 period of his departure." The magistrate, having considered a httle, directed the steward to go in and ask, " if, after the death of his lady's husband, the friend had come to pay honours to the deceased ; and if his lady could mention any ex- pression which she might have heard him utter.'' The steward went in and returned, sa}^- ing, " When my master had been dead for more than ten years, his friend came to pay honours to his memor}'. Seeing that the Three Chambers were sold, he was much surprised, and asked my mistress, ' Did 3'ou, after my departure, obtain that un- looked for treasure which I predicted ?' She answered, that indeed they did not. He then sighed, and observed that ' it was a fine piece of good fortune for those who had bought the property. Deceitful in their hearts, and contriving plots to get p 2 212 THE THREE possession of the place, they had acquired wealth which they did not deserve. In a short time, however, they would experience an unlooked for calamity.' A very few days after his departure, some person brought an accusation against the prisoner, and gave rise to this business. My mistress constantly praised and admired her friend, declaring that he was one who could see into futurity/' The magistrate, having heard thus far, laughed heartily, and going towards the screen, made a low bow, saying, " Many thanks to you, madam, for your informa- tion, which has enabled me, a dull person, to make out this extraordinary atVair. I'liere is no occasion for farther enquiry. I will trouble your messenger to l)ring a receipt, and will inunediately send the twenty pieces of treasure to your house." Ke-woo exclaimed, " M hat is vour rea- DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 213 son for this ? — I beg, sir, that you will in- form me/' The magistrate replied, " These twenty pieces of treasure were neither left by your ancestors, nor were they plundered by the prisoner. The fact was just this. That worthy person wished to redeem the property for your father, but as he pos- sessed a very independent disposition, and was tenacious in his refusal, your friend deposited the money in the floor, as the means of redeeming the property hereafter. Not wishing to declare this plainly, he pre- tended the agency of some spirit, with the idea, that when he was gone, your father would take up the treasure. When he came afterwards to pay honours to the deceased, observing that the pleasure ground had not been recovered, but that the Three Cham- bers were also sold, your friend knew that the treasure was in the hands of the enemy, and of course was vexed beyond measure. 214 THE THREE At his departure, therefore, he presented an anonymous petition, Avith the intention of waiting until the famil}- of the prisoner was broken up, and the property dismembered. As the truth is now plain, your original possessions ought to be restored to you. What have you to say against this?" Ke-woo, though in his heart he admired him for his decision, had still an objection to claiming the treasure, from the suspicion which mioht be attached to himself. He did not wish to take it in too great a hurry, but making the magistrate a bow, observed, that " he had formed an excellent conclu- sion, and must be possessed of admirable wisdom. That thouoh Lunj^-too* himself were to re-appear, he could not ccjual this. At the same time (said he), though you con- clude this treasure must have been \ci\ by * A fninous inaj^lstrate of ancient times, \\ lu) is now fleilicd, and lias tenipli's to liis jneinorv. DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 215 our generous friend, still there are no per- sons to bear witness to it, and it would not be well for me to put in a claim rashly. I therefore entreat, sir, that you will keep it in your treasury, to relieve the wants of the people during famine.'' While he was yet declining it, a servant came in, with a red ticket in his hand, and announced a visitor to his master in a whisper, saying, " The person of whom you have just now been talking* is arrived at the door. He says that he has come from a great distance to pay his respects to my mistress. The magistrate being present, I ought not to have announced him; but since he is acquainted with the business in question, and seems to have come at a * This servant must have waited at the conferences. It is customary, among the Chinese, to have a great number of attendants present on all occasions of ceremony, with a view to avoid the suspicion of conspiracy. 216 THE THREE lucky moment, I therefore acquaint you, sir, with his arrival, in case you may wish to ijiterrogate him/' Ke-woo was greatly re- joiced, and informed the magistrate. The latter was ready to dance with joy, and de- sired that he might be requested to enter immediately. He was a very respectable looking old man, w^ith a round face, and white locks. He paid his respects to his friend, but only slightly regarded the magistrate, who was a stranger to him, and making a bow, passed onward, saying, " The object of my visit was to see the wife of my deceased friend. I came not to court the rich or powerful, nor do your atlairs concern me, a person from a distant part of tlie country. I cannot presume to intrude on you ; so shew me the way into the house, that I may visit the lady." Ke-woo answered, " As my venerable DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 21? friend has come from a great distance, it is not right to treat him as a casual visitor ; but since the magistrate is engaged in an affair of difficulty, and wishes to ask you some questions, and since it is a fortunate occurrence to find you here, we entreat that you will sit down for a moment/' On this he made his obeisance, and sat down. The magistrate took some tea with him, and then bowing, said, " I believe, sir, that you are the person, who, about twenty years ago, performed an act of great virtue, of which no one was then conscious, but Avhich it has now fallen to my lot to bring to light. Were you not the author of that hidden treasure, which was left for your friend, Avithout any other notice than by some reference to the agency of spirits ?" The old man was taken somewhat by surprise, and for a moment did not speak. 218 THE THREE Having recovered from his embarrassment, he rephed, " How should such a rustic as I perform any act of great virtue ? — AVhat can jou mean, sir, by your question ?" Ke-woo answered, " Some words, re- specting a white rat, were heard to proceed from your mouth. In consequence of cer- tain suspicious appearances, they were going to impute the crime of harbouring thieves to an innocent person. As I could not bear to see this, I entreated the magistrate to set him at liberty. AVliile we were con- versing together on the subject, we by de- grees got a clue to it ; but being still un- certain whether the story of the white rat be true or false, we have to request a word, sir, from you to settle it.'' The old man was determined in his re- fusal, and would not speak, until a message came from the lady of the house, bogging him to give up the whole truth, in order DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 219 that an innocent person might be excul- pated. He then smiled, and made a com- plete disclosure of the circumstances, which had been profoundly secreted in his breast for more than twenty years. They agreed to a tittle with what the magistrate had said. Having directed the people to bring the treasure, in order that they might ex- amine the letters and marks upon its sur- face, all these particulars corresponded exactly. The magistrate and Ke-woo admired the old gentleman^s great virtues ; Ke-woo ex- patiated with the old gentleman on the penetrating intellect of the magistrate; while the magistrate again, and the old gentleman, dealt out their praises on the conduct of Ke-woo, who had conferred benefits, instead of cherishing resentment. " Such actions as these,'' they observed, " would be hereafter talked of far and 250 THE THREE wide : this might be predicted without the aid of divination/' They went on with their praises of each other without ceasing, and the attendants who were present, put their hands to their mouths, in order to conceal their laughter, observing, that " the magistrate had issued orders to apprehend him w^ho had presented the anonymous petition. Having found him out, he was sitting down and con- versing with him, instead of giving him a beating. This was certainly a novel pro- ceeding !" When the magistrate returned to his office, he sent a messenger to deliver the twenty pieces of treasure, and to procure a receipt for the same. Ke-woo, however, would not accept it. He wrote back a letter to that officer, requesting that he would giv(^ the money over to the family of the prisoner, and redeem the properly widi DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 221 it. That, in the first place, this would be fulfilling the intentions of his father; se- condl}^ it would accord with the wishes of his generous friend ; and lastly, it would enable the prisoner's family to purchase some other residence. Thus, neither the givers nor the receivers would be injured in the least. All parties praised such unexampled generosity. The magistrate, in compliance with the words of the letter, released the prisoner from his confinement, and deli- vering to him the original price, received from him the two deeds, by which the pro- perty had been sold. A messenger being sent off' with these, the pleasure ground, and the dwelling, were delivered into the possession of their original master. On the same day, in the highest of the " Three Dedicated Chambers,'' he offered up wine, in token of gratitude to heaven, 222 THE THREE saying, " Thus amply has my father's virtue been rewarded ; thus bitter has been the recompense of Tang-yo-chuen's crimes ! Oh, how is it, that men are afraid of virtue; or how is it, that they can delight in being vicious !" Tang-yo-chuen's son and his wife made out a deed, as before, delivering up their persons, and together with the price of the property, which they had received from the magistrate, offered themselves to Ke- woo, entreating that he would accept of their services for the remainder of their lives. He resolutely declined their offer, but at the same time soothed them with kind words. Then the husband and wife, having engraved a votive tablet, wishing him long life, took it home ami made offerings to it. Though they could not prevail on him to receive them into his service, they still recognized him as their DEDICATED CHAMBERS. 223 master. They not only endeavoured to recompense his favom's, but Hkewise wished people to understand that they were a part of his family, for then nobody, they thought, would venture to molest them. With a view to the remembrance of these events, every one had by heart a stanza of verses, which admonished persons of opu- lence to refrain from contriving schemes for the acquisition of their neighbours' property. The lines were to this effect, " By want compell'd, he sold his house and land. Both house and land the purchasers return ; Thus profit ends the course by virtue plann'd. While envious plotters their misfortunes mourn." CHINESE MORAL. The clear judgment of the magistrate, the disinterested generosity of the old friend, and the moderation of Ke-woo, 224 THE THREE DEDICATED CHAMBERS. in living retired without cherishing resent- ment, are all three deserving of everlasting remembrance. Those who are magistrates, ought to make the first their example. Persons of intluence, who reside in the country, ought to take a lesson of the last. Those, however, who possess great wealth, should not altogether copy the old friend, because his conduct, in presenting the anonymous petition, cannot be held up as an example. It may be observed of the actions of such generous friends in general, that very few are fit to be imitated, and that those, whose conduct can be recom- mended, have always been men of justice. The difference between those who are just, and those who are only generous, consists in the conduct of the one being worthy of imitation, and that of the others, not. CHINESE PROVERBS, &c. " Nor do Apophthegms only serve for ornament and delight, but also for action and civil use: as being the edge tools of speech, which cut and penetrate the knots of business and affairs." — Lord Bacon. " A collection of good sentences resembles a string of pearls." — Chinese Saying. I ] CHINESE PROVERBS, 1. The man of first rate excellence is virtuous independently of instruction : he of the middling class is so after instruction : the lowest order of men are vicious, in spite of instruction. 2. By a long journey we know a horse^s strength : so length of days shews a man's heart. 3. The spontaneous gifts of Heaven are of high value ; but the strength of per- severance gains the prize. 4. The generations of men follow each other, like the waves in a swollen river. 5. In the days of affluence, always think of poverty : do not let want come upon Q 2 228 CHINESE PROVERBS, &.C. you, and make you remember with regret the time of plenty. (The Chinese have also the following, in complete opposition to the ibregoing, maxim.) 6. Let us get drunk to-day, while we have wine : the sorrows of to-morrow may be borne to-morrow. 7. To correct an evil which already exists, is not so well as to foresee and pre- vent it. 8. Modesty is attended with profit : ar- rogance brings on destruction. 9. The growth of the mulberry tree cor- res})onds with its early bent. 10. The same tree may produce sour and sweet fruit : the same mother may havci a virtuous and \ icioiis j)rogony. 11. Jt is e(jiially criminal in the governor, and the governed, to violate the laws. 12. As the scream of the caiilc is heard CHINESE PROVERBS, &C. 229 when she has passed over; so a man's name remains after his death. 13. Questions of right and wrong (with reference to men's characters) are every day arising : if not hstened to, they die away of themseh^es. 14. Doubt and distraction are on earth : the brightness of truth in heaven. 15. In learning, age and youth go for nothing : the best informed takes the pre- cedence. 16. Against open crimes, punishments can oppose a barrier : but secret offences it is difficult for the laws to reach. 17. If there be no faith in our words, of what use are they ? 18. If there be a want of concord among members of the same family, other men will take advantage of it to injure them. 19. The world's unfavourable views of conduct and character are but as the float- 230 CHINESE PROVERBS, &C. ing clouds, from which the brightest day is not free. 20. Wine and good dinners make abund- ance of friends ; but in the time of adver- sity, not one is to be found. 21. Let every man sweep the snow from before his own doors, and not trouble him- self about the frost on his neicfhbour's tiles. 22. He who can suppress a moment's anger, may prevent many days' sorrow. 23. The human relations are *five in number, but that of husband and wife is the first in rank : the great ceremonies (or rites) amount to three thousand, but that of marriage is the most important. 24. Worldly fame and pleasure are de- structive to the virtue of the mind ; anxious thoughts and apprehensions are injurious to the health of the body. * Viz. Husband and wife, pan iit and ( liild. hrolln rs. prinro and ministor, fiirnds. CHINESE PROVERBS, &C. 231 25. In a field of melons, do not pull up your shoe : under a plum-tree, do not ad- just your cap, (i. e. be very careful of your conduct under circumstances of suspicion.) 26. The man of worth is really great, without being proud ; the mean man is proud, without being really great. 27. Time flies like an arrow : days and months like a weaver's shuttle. 28. It is said in the Ye-king, that " Of those men, whose talent is inconsiderable, while their station is eminent, and of those, whose knowledge is small, while their schemes are large, — there are few who do not become miserable. 29. When a man obtains a large sum, without having earned it, if it does not make him very happy, it will certainly make him very unhappy. 30. Though a man may be utterly stupid, he is very perspicacious while reprehending 232 CHINESE PROVERBS, Sec. the bad actions of others ; though he may be very intelHgent, he is dull enough, while excusing his own faults. Do you only correct yourself on the same principle that you correct others, and excuse others on the same principle that you excuse your- self. 31. The figure of men in ancient times resembled that of wild beasts,* but their hearts contained the most perfect virtue. The outward appearance of the present race of men is human, but their dispositions are utterly brutish. 32. Do not anxiously expect what is * The absurd fables, related in ihe Chinese books of ancient history, tell very much against their fidelity, and afford a strong antidote to the implicit luliif, with whiih the Jesuitical accounts of Chinese anti(|uity lui\r \)vcu listened to. In fact, then most amient historical \v«>rk. extant, (the C/iun-fscw of Confucius) is not oUler than the history of Herodotus, and not .so o/d as H(»mcr's Poems. CHINESE PROVERBS, &C. 233 not yet come; do not vainly regret what is already past. 33. Men's passions are like water. When water has once flowed over, it cannot easily be restored ; when the passions have once been indulged, the}^ cannot easily be re- strained. Water must be kept in by dykes, the passions must be regulated by the laws of propriety. 34. Without ascending the mountain, we cannot admire the height of heaven ; without descending into the valley, we can- not admire the depth of the earth ; without listening to the maxims left by the ancient Kings, we cannot know the excellence of wisdom. 35. In making a candle, we seek for light ; in studying a book, we seek for rea- son : lisht, to illuminate a dark chamber ; reason, to enlighten man's heart. 36. By learning, the sons of the common 234 CHINESE PROVERBS, &C. people become public ministers ; without learning, the sons of public ministers be- come mingled with the mass of the people. 37. Though an affair may be easily ac- complished, if it is not attended to, it will never be completed : though your son may be well-disposed, if he is not instructed, he will still remain ignorant. 38. If you love your son, be liberal in punishment ; if you hate your son, accus- tom him to dainties. 39. Past events are as clear as a mirror: the future, as obscure as varnish. 40. What exists in the morning, we can- not be certain of in the evening; what exists in the evening, we cannot calculate upon for the next morning. Tlic fortunes of men are as variable as the winds and clouds of heaven. 41. When you are haj)picr than usual, you should be pre])ared against some great CHINESE PROVERBS, &C. 235 misfortune. Where joy is extreme, it pre- cedes grief. Having obtained the Imperial favour, you should think of disgrace; Hving in quiet, you should think of danger. When your glory is complete, your disgrace will be the greater ; when your success is great, your ruin will be the deeper.* 42. In security, do not forget danger: in times of public tranquillity, be prepared against anarchy. 43. The fishes, though deep in the water, may be hooked ; the birds, though high in the air, may be shot ; but man's secret thoughts are out of our reach. The hea- vens may be measured, the earth may be surveyed ; the heart of man only is not to be known. * " Qui nimios optabat honores, Et nimias poscebat opes, numerosa parabat Excelsa? turris tabulata, unde altior esset Casus, et inipulsai praeceps immane ruinze." Juvenal, Sat. x. 104. 236 CHINESE PROVERBS, &C. 44. Riches are what the man of worth considers hghtly ; death is what the mean man deems of importance. 45. When the man of a naturally 2;ood propensity has much wealth, it injures his advancement in wisdom : when the worth- less man has much wealth, it increases his faults. 46. In enacting laws, rigour is indispen- sable ; in executing them, mere}'. 47. Do not consider any vice as trivial, and therefore practise it : do not consider any virtue as unimportant, and therefore neglect it. 48. Following virtue is like ascending a steep : following vice, like rushing down a precipice. 49. All events are separately fated before they happen. Floating on the stream of life, it is in \ain that we torment oniselves. Nothing proceeds iVom the machinations CHINESE PROVERBS, ScC. 237 of men, but the whole of our hves is planned bj destin}^ 50. A vicious wife, and an untoward son, no laws can govern. 51. He who tells me of my faults, is my instructor : he who tells me of my virtues, does me harm. 52. Let your words be few, and your companions select : thus you will escape remorse and repentance ; thus you will avoid sorrow and shame. 53. If a man's wishes be few, his health will be flourishing : if he has many anxious thoughts, his constitution will decay. 54. Honours come by dihgence: riches spring from economy. 55. The mild and gentle must ultimately profit themselves : the violent and fierce must bring down misfortune. 56. If you wish to know what most 238 CHINESE PIIOVEPBS, &c. engages a man's thoughts, you have only to listen to his conversation. 57' In our actions, we should accord with the will of heaven : in our words, we should consult the feelings of men. 58. If a man be not enlightened within, what lamp shall he light? if his intentions be not upright, what prayers shall he repeat.'^ 59. Man perishes in the pursuit of wealth ; as the bird meets with destruction in search of its food. 60. Knowing what is right without prac- tising it, denotes a want of proper reso- lution. 61. There are plenty of men in the world, but very few heroes.* 62. Poverty and ruin must in the end be proportioned to a man's wickedness aiul craft ; for these are (jualities which heaven * Like the aiiiiy of Xcixcs, IIoXAoi /xsv uvdgwTioi — oAiyoi '6e uv^ges. CHINESE PROVERBS, &C. 239 will not suffer to prevail. Were riches and honours the proper results of crafty vil- lainy, the better part of the world must fatten on the winds. 63. The best cure for drunkenness is, whilst sober, to observe a drunken man. 64. The opening flower blooms alike in all places : the moon sheds an equal ra- diance on every mountain and every river. Evil exists only in the heart of man ; all other things shew the benevolence of heaven towards the human race. 65. Would you know the character of the Prince, examine his ministers; would you understand the disposition of any man, look at his companions ; would you know that of a father, observe his son. 66. A man is as ignorant of his own failings, as the ox is unconscious of his great strength. . 67. A man, by the cultivation of virtue. 240 CHINESE PROVERBS, &C. consults his own interest : his stores of wisdom and reflexion are every day filhng up. 68. Confucius says, " The capacity for knowledge, of the inferior man, is small, and easily filled up : the intelligence of the superior man is deep, and not easily sa- tisfied." 69. Though the screen be torn, its frame is still preserved : though the good man be plunged in want, his virtue still remains to him. 70. Without the wisdom of the learned, the clown could not be governed ; without the labour of the clown, the learned could not be fed. 71. The cure of ignorance is study, — as meat is that of hunger. 72. Though the white gem be cast into the din, its j)urity cannot he (lastingly) sullied: though the good man live in a vile CHINESE PROVERBS, &C. 241 place, his heart cannot be depraved. As the fir and the cypress withstand the rigours of the winter, so resplendent wis- dom is safe in situations of difficulty and danger. 73. It is not easy to stop the fire, when the water is at a distance: friends at hand, are better than relations afar off. 74. If a man wish to attain to the excel- lence of superior beings, let him first culti- vate the virtues of humanity ; for if not perfect in human virtue, how shall he reach immortal perfection "^ 75. Man is born without knowledge, and when he has obtained it, very soon becomes old : when his experience is ripe, death suddenly seizes him. 76. There are three great maxims to be observed by those who hold public situ- ations; viz. to be upright, — to be circum- spect, — to be dihgent. Those who know R 242 CHINESE PROVERBS, Sec. these three rules, know that by which they will ensure their own safety in office. 77. A man's prosperous, or declining condition, may be gathered from the pro- portion of his waking to his sleeping hours. 78. Unsullied poverty is always happy, while impure wealth brings with it many sorrows. 79- He who receives a benefit, and is not ungrateful, — as a son, will be dutiful, — as a minister, will be faithful. 80. The fame of men's good actions sel- dom goes beyond their own doors; but their evil deeds are carried to a thousand miles distance. 81. The sincerity of him, who assents to every thing, must be small; and he who praises you inordinately to your face, must be altogether false. 82. Petty distinctions are injurious to rectitude; quibbling words violate right reason. CHINESE PROVERBS, &C. 243 83. Though powerful medicines be nauseous to the taste, they are good for the disease: though candid advice be unplea- sant to the ear, it is profitable for the con- duct. 84. To shew compassion towards the people, by remitting the severity of the taxes, is the virtue of the prince; and to offer up their possessions, sinking their pri- vate views in regard for the public, is the duty of the people. 85. Though the life of man be short of a hundred years, he gives himself as much pain and anxiety as if he were to live a thousand. 86. The advantages of wise institutions can be sought for, only in an inflexible ob- servance of them. 87. If a man does not receive guests at home, he will meet with very few hosts abroad. r2 244 CHINESE PROVERBS, Sec. 88. Where views and dispositions agree, the most distant will unite in friendship: where they disagree, relations themselves will soon be at enmit3^ 89. Without a clear mirror, a Avoman cannot know the state of her own face: without a true friend, a man cannot discern the errors of his own actions. 90. The evidence of others is not com- parable to personal experience: nor is " I heard" so good as " I saw." 91. The three greatest misfortunes in life are, in youth to bury one's father, — at the middle age to lose one's wife, — and, being old, to have no son. 92. A virtuous woman is a source of honour to her husband: a Aitious one causes him disgrace. 93. It being asked, " Supposing a wi- dowed woman to be very poor and desti- tute, mii;ht she in such a case take a second CHINESE PROVERBS, &C. 245 husband?'' — It was answered, " This ques- tion arises merely from the fear of cold and hunger: but to be starved to death is a very small matter, compared with the loss of her respectability/' 94. Those who cause divisions, in order to injure other people, are in fact preparing pitfalls for their own ruin. 95. Even the carriers of burthens may, by honesty and dihgence, obtain a suffi- ciency. The Proverb says, " Every blade of grass has its share of the dews of Hea- ven :" and " Though the birds of the forest have no garners, the wide world is all be- fore them." 96. Wisdom, and Virtue, and Benevo- lence, and Rectitude, without Good-breed- ing, are imperfect. 97. He who wishes to know the road through the mountains, must ask those who 246 CHINESE PROVERBS, &C. have already trodden it. (i. e. we must look for instruction to the experienced.) 98. Rich men look forward to the years that are to come ; but the poor man has time to think only of what is immediately before him. 99. It is better to believe that a man does possess good qualities, than to assert that he does not. 100. The mischiefs of hre, or water, or robbers, extend only to the bod}^ ; but those of pernicious doctrines, to the mind. 101. The original tendency of man's heart is to do right : and if a due caution be observed, it will not of itself go wrong. 102. As it is impossible to please men in all things, our only care should be to satisfy our own consciences. 103. He who at once knows himscli', and knows others, will triumph as often as he contends. CHINESE PROVERBS, &C. 247 104. Though brothers are very near relations, the difference of fortune widely separates them. 105. Eat your three meals in the day, and look forward to sleeping at night.* 106. A man's countenance is a sufficient index of his prosperity or adversity, with- out asking him any questions. 107. Adversity is necessary to the deve- lopement of men's virtues. 108. It is too late to pull the rein when the horse has gained the brink of the pre- cipice: the time for stopping the leak is passed, when the vessel is in the midst of the river. 109. The scholar is acquainted with all * " Carpe, mortalis, mea dona laetus, Carpe, nee plantas alias require, Sed ssitur panis, satur et soporis, Caetera sperne." 248 CHINESE PROVERBS, &C. things, without the trouble of going out of doors. 110. He who advances may fight, but he who retreats may take care of himself. 111. Those who respect themselves will be honourable; but he who thinks lightly of himself will be held cheap by the world. 112. Great promises are not followed by corresponding actions. 113. It is easy to convince a wise man, but to reason with a fool is a difficult un- dertaking. 114. To meet with an old friend in a distant country,* may be compared to the deliffhtfulness of rain after alone; drought. 115. Speak of men's virtues as if they were your own ; and of their vices, as if you were liable to their punishment. 116. Diligence is a treasure of inestima- * Literally, " village." CHINESE PROVERBS, &C. 249 ble price; and prudence is the pledge of security. 117. Mencius said, " All men concur in despising a glutton, because he gives up every thing that is valuable, for the sake of pampering what is so contemptible/' 118. Him, whose words are consistent with reason, and whose actions are squared by the rule of rectitude, what man shall dare to oppose ? 119- Inattention to minute actions will ultimately be prejudicial to a man's virtue. 120. To the contented, even poverty and obscurity bring happiness : Avhile to the ambitious, wealth and honours themselves are productive of misery. 121. As the light of a single star tinges the mountains of many regions ; so a single unguarded expression affects the virtue of a whole life. 122. Though a poor man should live in s 250 CHINESE PROVERBS, &C. the midst of a noisy market, no one will ask about him : though a rich man should bury himself among the mountains, his re- lations will come to him from a distance. 123. Knowledge is boundless, but the capacity of one man is limited. 124. A single hair of silk does not make a thread ; one tree does not make a grove. 125. A single conversation across the table with a wiseman, is better than ten years mere study of books. 126. Prudence will carry a man all over the world; but the impetuous find every step difficult. FINIS. " Lnmliin : I'tiiiU'il by C. KnwoNb, i i 14 DAY USE RFTURN TO DESK FROM WHICH BORROWED LOAN DEPT. This book is due on the last date stami>ed below, or on the date to which renewed. Renewals only: Tel. No. 642-3405 Renewals axof^ be made^ 4 days ^rior to date dae. RETURN TO the circulation desk of any University of California Library or to the NORTHERN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY BIdg. 400, Richmond Field Station University of California Richmond, CA 94804-4698 ALL BOOKS MAY BE RECALLED AFTER 7 DAYS • 2-month loans may be renewed by calling (510)642-6753 • 1-year loans may be recharged by bringing books to NRLF • Renewals and recharges may be made 4 days prior to due date. DUE AS STAMPED BELOW SEP 1 8 2001 i I GENERAL IIBBARY. U.C. BEBKEU B000«it3bS7 •H, r^ SHUTS' , UNIVERSITY OF CAUFORNIA UBRARY ■W^m m