The Inexorable Justice of
the Mandarin Shan Tien
“By having access to this enclosure
you will be able to walk where otherwise you must
stand. That in itself is cheap at the price of
three reputed strings of inferior cash. Furthermore,
it is possible to breathe.”
“The outlook, in one direction,
is an extensive one,” admitted Kai Lung, gazing
towards the sky. “Here, moreover, is a shutter
through which the vista doubtless lengthens.”
“So long as there is no chance
of you exploring it any farther than your neck, it
does not matter,” said Li-loe. “Outside
lies a barren region of the yamen garden where no
one ever comes. I will now leave you, having
to meet one with whom I would traffic for a goat.
When I return be prepared to retrace your steps to
the prison cell.”
“The shadow moves as the sun
directs,” replied Kai Lung, and with courteous
afterthought he added the wonted parting: “Slowly,
slowly; walk slowly.”
In such a manner the story-teller
found himself in a highly-walled enclosure, lying
between the prison-house and the yamen garden, a few
days after his arrival in Yu-ping. Ming-shu had
not eaten his word.
The yard itself possessed no attraction
for Kai Lung. Almost before Li-loe had disappeared
he was at the shutter in the wall, had forced it open
and was looking out. Thus long he waited, motionless,
but observing every leaf that stirred among the trees
and shrubs and neglected growth beyond. At last
a figure passed across a distant glade and at the
sight Kai Lung lifted up a restrained voice in song:
“At the foot of a bleak
and inhospitable mountain
An insignificant stream winds
its uncared way;
Although inferior to the Yangtze-kiang
in every detail
Yet fish glide to and fro
among its crannies
Nor would they change their
home for the depths of the widest
river.
The palace of the sublime
Emperor is made rich with hanging
curtains.
While here rough stone walls
forbid repose.
Yet there is one who unhesitatingly
prefers the latter;
For from an open shutter here
he can look forth,
And perchance catch a glimpse
of one who may pass by.
The occupation of the Imperial
viceroy is both lucrative and
noble;
While that of a relater of
imagined tales is by no means
esteemed.
But he who thus expressed
himself would not exchange with the
other;
For around the identity of
each heroine he can entwine the
personality
of one whom he has encountered.
And thus she is ever by his
side.”
“Your uplifted voice comes from
an unexpected quarter, minstrel,” said a melodious
voice, and the maiden whom he had encountered in the
wood stood before him. “What crime have
you now committed?”
“An ancient one. I presumed to raise my
unworthy eyes ”
“Alas, story-teller,”
interposed the maiden hastily, “it would seem
that the star to which you chained your wrist
has not carried you into the assembly of the gods.”
“Yet already it has borne me
half-way into a company of malefactors.
Doubtless on the morrow the obliging Mandarin Shan
Tien will arrange for the journey to be complete.”
“Yet have you then no further
wish to continue in an ordinary existence?”
asked the maiden.
“To this person,” replied
Kai Lung, with a deep-seated look, “existence
can never again be ordinary. Admittedly it may
be short.”
As they conversed together in this
inoffensive manner she whom Li-loe had called the
Golden Mouse held in her delicately-formed hands a
priceless bowl filled with ripe fruit of the rarer
kinds which she had gathered. These from time
to time she threw up to the opening, rightly deciding
that one in Kai Lung’s position would stand in
need of sustenance, and he no less dexterously held
and retained them. When the bowl was empty she
continued for a space to regard it silently, as though
exploring the many-sided recesses of her mind.
“You have claimed to be a story-teller
and have indeed made a boast that there is no arising
emergency for which you are unprepared,” she
said at length. “It now befalls that you
may be put to a speedy test. Is the nature of
this imagined scene” thus she indicated
the embellishment of the bowl “familiar
to your eyes?”
“It is that known as ‘The
Willow,’” replied Kai Lung. “There
is a story ”
“There is a story!” exclaimed
the maiden, loosening from her brow the overhanging
look of care. “Thus and thus. Frequently
have I importuned him before whom you will appear
to explain to me the meaning of the scene. When
you are called upon to plead your cause, see to it
well that your knowledge of such a tale is clearly
shown. He before whom you kneel, craftily plied
meanwhile by my unceasing petulance, will then desire
to hear it from your lips . . . At the striking
of the fourth gong the day is done. What lies
between rests with your discriminating wit.”
“You are deep in the subtler
kinds of wisdom, such as the weak possess,”
confessed Kai Lung. “Yet how will this avail
to any length?”
“That which is put off from
to-day is put off from to-morrow,” was the confident
reply. “For the rest at a corresponding
gong-stroke of each day it is this person’s
custom to gather fruit. Farewell, minstrel.”
When Li-loe returned a little later
Kai Lung threw his two remaining strings of cash about
that rapacious person’s neck and embraced him
as he exclaimed:
“Chieftain among doorkeepers,
when I go to the Capital to receive the all-coveted
title ‘Leaf-crowned’ and to chant ceremonial
odes before the Court, thou shalt accompany me as
forerunner, and an agile tribe of selected goats shall
sport about thy path.”
“Alas, manlet,” replied
the other, weeping readily, “greatly do I fear
that the next journey thou wilt take will be in an
upward or a downward rather than a sideway direction.
This much have I learned, and to this end, at some
cost admittedly, I enticed into loquacity one who
knows another whose brother holds the key of Ming-shu’s
confidence: that to-morrow the Mandarin will begin
to distribute justice here, and out of the depths
of Ming-shu’s malignity the name of Kai Lung
is the first set down.”
“With the title,” continued
Kai Lung cheerfully, “there goes a sufficiency
of taels; also a vat of a potent wine of a certain
kind.”
“If,” suggested Li-loe,
looking anxiously around, “you have really discovered
hidden about this place a secret store of wine, consider
well whether it would not be prudent to entrust it
to a faithful friend before it is too late.”
It was indeed as Li-loe had foretold.
On the following day, at the second gong-stroke after
noon, the order came and, closely guarded, Kai Lung
was led forth. The middle court had been duly
arranged, with a formidable display of chains, weights,
presses, saws, branding irons and other implements
for securing justice. At the head of a table
draped with red sat the Mandarin Shan Tien, on his
right the secretary of his hand, the contemptible
Ming-shu. Round about were positioned others
who in one necessity or another might be relied upon
to play an ordered part. After a lavish explosion
of fire-crackers had been discharged, sonorous bells
rung and gongs beaten, a venerable geomancer disclosed
by means of certain tests that all doubtful influences
had been driven off and that truth and impartiality
alone remained.
“Except on the part of the prisoners,
doubtless,” remarked the Mandarin, thereby imperilling
the gravity of all who stood around.
“The first of those to prostrate
themselves before your enlightened clemency, Excellence,
is a notorious assassin who, under another name, has
committed many crimes,” began the execrable Ming-shu.
“He confesses that, now calling himself Kai
Lung, he has recently journeyed from Loo-chow, where
treason ever wears a smiling face.”
“Perchance he is saddened by
our city’s loyalty,” interposed the benign
Shan Tien, “for if he is smiling now it is on
the side of his face removed from this one’s
gaze.”
“The other side of his face
is assuredly where he will be made to smile ere long,”
acquiesced Ming-shu, not altogether to his chief’s
approval, as the analogy was already his. “Furthermore,
he has been detected lurking in secret meeting-places
by the wayside, and on reaching Yu-ping he raised
his rebellious voice inviting all to gather round
and join his unlawful band. The usual remedy in
such cases during periods of stress, Excellence, is
strangulation.”
“The times are indeed pressing,”
remarked the agile-minded Mandarin, “and the
penalty would appear to be adequate.” As
no one suffered inconvenience at his attitude, however,
Shan Tien’s expression assumed a more unbending
cast.
“Let the witnesses appear,” he commanded
sharply.
“In so clear a case it has not
been thought necessary to incur the expense of hiring
the usual witnesses,” urged Ming-shu; “but
they are doubtless clustered about the opium floor
and will, if necessary, testify to whatever is required.”
“The argument is a timely one,”
admitted the Mandarin. “As the result cannot
fail to be the same in either case, perhaps the accommodating
prisoner will assist the ends of justice by making
a full confession of his crimes?”
“High Excellence,” replied
the story-teller, speaking for the first time, “it
is truly said that that which would appear as a mountain
in the evening may stand revealed as a mud-hut by
the light of day. Hear my unpainted word.
I am of the abject House of Kai and my inoffensive
rice is earned as a narrator of imagined tales.
Unrolling my threadbare mat at the middle hour of
yesterday, I had raised my distressing voice and announced
an intention to relate the Story of Wong Ts’in,
that which is known as ’The Legend of the Willow
Plate Embellishment,’ when a company of armed
warriors, converging upon me ”
“Restrain the melodious flow
of your admitted eloquence,” interrupted the
Mandarin, veiling his arising interest. “Is
the story, to which you have made reference, that
of the scene widely depicted on plates and earthenware?”
“Undoubtedly. It is the
true and authentic legend as related by the eminent
Tso-yi.”
“In that case,” declared
Shan Tien dispassionately, “it will be necessary
for you to relate it now, in order to uphold your claim.
Proceed.”
“Alas, Excellence,” protested
Ming-shu from a bitter throat, “this matter
will attenuate down to the stroke of evening rice.
Kowtowing beneath your authoritative hand, that which
the prisoner only had the intention to relate does
not come within the confines of his evidence.”
“The objection is superficial
and cannot be sustained,” replied Shan Tien.
“If an evilly-disposed one raised a sword to
strike this person, but was withheld before the blow
could fall, none but a leper would contend that because
he did not progress beyond the intention thereby he
should go free. Justice must be impartially upheld
and greatly do I fear that we must all submit.”
With these opportune words the discriminating
personage signified to Kai Lung that he should begin.
The Story of Wong
T’sin and the Willow Plate Embellishment
Wong Ts’in, the rich porcelain
maker, was ill at ease within himself. He had
partaken of his customary midday meal, flavoured the
repast by unsealing a jar of matured wine, consumed
a little fruit, a few sweetmeats and half a dozen
cups of unapproachable tea, and then retired to an
inner chamber to contemplate philosophically from the
reposeful attitude of a reclining couch.
But upon this occasion the merchant
did not contemplate restfully. He paced the floor
in deep dejection and when he did use the couch at
all it was to roll upon it in a sudden access of internal
pain. The cause of his distress was well known
to the unhappy person thus concerned, nor did it lessen
the pangs of his emotion that it arose entirely from
his own ill-considered action.
When Wong Ts’in had discovered,
by the side of a remote and obscure river, the inexhaustible
bed of porcelain clay that ensured his prosperity,
his first care was to erect adequate sheds and labouring-places;
his next to build a house sufficient for himself and
those in attendance round about him.
So far prudence had ruled his actions,
for there is a keen edge to the saying: “He
who sleeps over his workshop brings four eyes into
the business,” but in one detail Wong T’sin’s
head and feet went on different journeys, for with
incredible oversight he omitted to secure the experience
of competent astrologers and omen-casters in fixing
the exact site of his mansion.
The result was what might have been
expected. In excavating for the foundations,
Wong T’sin’s slaves disturbed the repose
of a small but rapacious earth-demon that had already
been sleeping there for nine hundred and ninety-nine
years. With the insatiable cunning of its kind,
this vindictive creature waited until the house was
completed and then proceeded to transfer its unseen
but formidable presence to the quarters that were
designed for Wong Ts’in himself. Thenceforth,
from time to time, it continued to revenge itself for
the trouble to which it had been put by an insidious
persecution. This frequently took the form of
fastening its claws upon the merchant’s digestive
organs, especially after he had partaken of an unusually
rich repast (for in some way the display of certain
viands excited its unreasoning animosity), pressing
heavily upon his chest, invading his repose with dragon-dreams
while he slept, and the like. Only by the exercise
of an ingenuity greater than its own could Wong Ts’in
succeed in baffling its ill-conditioned spite.
On this occasion, recognizing from
the nature of his pangs what was taking place, Wong
Ts’in resorted to a stratagem that rarely failed
him. Announcing in a loud voice that it was his
intention to refresh the surface of his body by the
purifying action of heated vapour, and then to proceed
to his mixing-floor, the merchant withdrew. The
demon, being an earth-dweller with the ineradicable
objection of this class of creatures towards all the
elements of moisture, at once relinquished its hold,
and going direct to the part of the works indicated,
it there awaited its victim with the design of resuming
its discreditable persecution.
Wong Ts’in had spoken with a
double tongue. On leaving the inner chamber he
quickly traversed certain obscure passages of his house
until he reached an inferior portal. Even if the
demon had suspected his purpose it would not have
occurred to a creature of its narrow outlook that
anyone of Wong Ts’in’s importance would
make use of so menial an outway. The merchant
therefore reached his garden unperceived and thenceforward
maintained an undeviating face in the direction of
the Outer Expanses. Before he had covered many
li he was assured that he had indeed succeeded
for the time in shaking off his unscrupulous tormentor.
His internal organs again resumed their habitual calm
and his mind was lightened as from an overhanging cloud.
There was another reason why Wong
Ts’in sought the solitude of the thinly-peopled
outer places, away from the influence and distraction
of his own estate. For some time past a problem
that had once been remote was assuming dimensions
of increasing urgency. This detail concerns Fa
Fai, who had already been referred to by a person
of literary distinction, in a poetical analogy occupying
three written volumes, as a pearl-tinted peach-blossom
shielded and restrained by the silken net-work of
wise parental affection (and recognizing the justice
of the comparison, Wong Ts’in had been induced
to purchase the work in question). Now that Fa
Fai had attained an age when she could fittingly
be sought in marriage the contingency might occur at
any time, and the problem confronting her father’s
decision was this: owing to her incomparable
perfection Fa Fai must be accounted one of Wong
Ts’in’s chief possessions, the other undoubtedly
being his secret process of simulating the lustrous
effect of pure gold embellishment on china by the
application of a much less expensive substitute.
Would it be more prudent to concentrate the power
of both influences and let it become known that with
Fa Fai would go the essential part of his
very remunerative clay enterprise, or would it be more
prudent to divide these attractions and secure two
distinct influences, both concerned about his welfare?
In the first case there need be no reasonable limit
to the extending vista of his ambition, and he might
even aspire to greet as a son the highest functionary
of the province an official of such heavily-sustained
importance that when he went about it required six
chosen slaves to carry him, and of late it had been
considered more prudent to employ eight.
If, on the other hand, Fa Fai
went without any added inducement, a mandarin of moderate
rank would probably be as high as Wong Ts’in
could look, but he would certainly be able to adopt
another of at least equal position, at the price of
making over to him the ultimate benefit of his discovery.
He could thus acquire either two sons of reasonable
influence, or one who exercised almost unlimited authority.
In view of his own childlessness, and of his final
dependence on the services of others, which arrangement
promised the most regular and liberal transmission
of supplies to his expectant spirit when he had passed
into the Upper Air, and would his connection with one
very important official or with two subordinate ones
secure him the greater amount of honour and serviceable
recognition among the more useful deities?
To Wong Ts’in’s logical
mind it seemed as though there must be a definite
answer to this problem. If one manner of behaving
was right the other must prove wrong, for as the wise
philosopher Ning-hy was wont to say: “Where
the road divides, there stand two Ning-hys.”
The decision on a matter so essential to his future
comfort ought not to be left to chance. Thus
it had become a habit of Wong Ts’in’s to
penetrate the Outer Spaces in the hope of there encountering
a specific omen.
Alas, it has been well written:
“He who thinks that he is raising a mound may
only in reality be digging a pit.” In his
continual search for a celestial portent among the
solitudes Wong Ts’in had of late necessarily
somewhat neglected his earthly (as it may thus be
expressed) interests. In these emergencies certain
of the more turbulent among his workers had banded
themselves together into a confederacy under the leadership
of a craftsman named Fang. It was the custom
of these men, who wore a badge and recognized a mutual
oath and imprecation, to present themselves suddenly
before Wong Ts’in and demand a greater reward
for their exertions than they had previously agreed
to, threatening that unless this was accorded they
would cast down the implements of their labour in
unison and involve in idleness those who otherwise
would have continued at their task. This menace
Wong Ts’in bought off from time to time by agreeing
to their exactions, but it began presently to appear
that this way of appeasing them resembled Chou Hong’s
method of extinguishing a fire by directing jets of
wind against it. On the day with which this related
story has so far concerned itself, a band of the most
highly remunerated and privileged of the craftsmen
had appeared before Wong Ts’in with the intolerable
Fang at their head. These men were they whose
skill enabled them laboriously to copy upon the surfaces
of porcelain a given scene without appreciable deviation
from one to the other, for in those remote cycles
of history no other method was yet known or even dreamed
of.
“Suitable greetings, employer
of our worthless services,” remarked their leader,
seating himself upon the floor unbidden. “These
who speak through the mouth of the cringing mendicant
before you are the Bound-together Brotherhood of Colour-mixers
and Putters-on of Thought-out Designs, bent upon a
just cause.”
“May their Ancestral Tablets
never fall into disrepair,” replied Wong Ts’in
courteously. “For the rest let
the mouth referred to shape itself into the likeness
of a narrow funnel, for the lengthening gong-strokes
press round about my unfinished labours.”
“That which in justice requires
the amplitude of a full-sized cask shall be pressed
down into the confines of an inadequate vessel,”
assented Fang. “Know then, O battener upon
our ill-requited skill, how it has come to our knowledge
that one who is not of our Brotherhood moves among
us and performs an equal task for a less reward.
This is our spoken word in consequence: in place
of one tael every man among us shall now take two,
and he who before has laboured eight gongs to receive
it shall henceforth labour four. Furthermore,
he who is speaking shall, as their recognized head
and authority, always be addressed by the honourable
title of ‘Polished,’ and the dog who is
not one of us shall be cast forth.”
“My hand itches to reward you
in accordance with the inner prompting of a full heart,”
replied the merchant, after a well-sustained pause.
“But in this matter my very deficient ears must
be leading my threadbare mind astray. The moon
has not been eaten up since the day when you stood
before me in a like attitude and bargained that every
man should henceforth receive a full tael where hitherto
a half had been his portion, and that in place of
the toil of sixteen gong-strokes eight should suffice.
Upon this being granted all bound themselves by spoken
word that the matter should stand thus and thus between
us until the gathering-in of the next rice harvest.”
“That may have been so at the
time,” admitted Fang, with dog-like obstinacy,
“but it was not then known that you had pledged
yourself to Hien Nan for tenscore embellished plates
of porcelain within a stated time, and that our services
would therefore be essential to your reputation.
There has thus arisen what may be regarded as a new
vista of eventualities, and this frees us from the
bondage of our spoken word. Having thus moderately
stated our unbending demand, we will depart until
the like gong-stroke of to-morrow, when, if our claim
be not agreed to, all will cast down their implements
of labour with the swiftness of a lightning-flash
and thereby involve the whole of your too-profitable
undertaking in well-merited stagnation. We go,
venerable head; auspicious omens attend your movements!”
“May the All-Seeing guide your
footsteps,” responded Wong Ts’in, and
with courteous forbearance he waited until they were
out of hearing before he added “into
a vat of boiling sulphur!”
Thus may the position be outlined
when Wei Chang, the unassuming youth whom the black-hearted
Fang had branded with so degrading a comparison, sat
at his appointed place rather than join in the discreditable
conspiracy, and strove by his unaided dexterity to
enable Wong Ts’in to complete the tenscore embellished
plates by the appointed time. Yet already he
knew that in this commendable ambition his head grew
larger than his hands, for he was the slowest-working
among all Wong Ts’in’s craftsmen, and even
then his copy could frequently be detected from the
original. Not to overwhelm his memory with unmerited
contempt it is fitting now to reveal somewhat more
of the unfolding curtain of events.
Wei Chang was not in reality a worker
in the art of applying coloured designs to porcelain
at all. He was a student of the literary excellences
and had decided to devote his entire life to the engaging
task of reducing the most perfectly matched analogy
to the least possible number of words when the unexpected
appearance of Fa Fai unsettled his ambitions.
She was restraining the impatience of a powerful horse
and controlling its movements by means of a leather
thong, while at the same time she surveyed the landscape
with a disinterested glance in which Wei Chang found
himself becoming involved. Without stopping even
to consult the spirits of his revered ancestors on
so important a decision, he at once burned the greater
part of his collection of classical analogies and engaged
himself, as one who is willing to become more proficient,
about Wong Ts’in’s earth-yards. Here,
without any reasonable intention of ever becoming
in any way personally congenial to her, he was in a
position occasionally to see the distant outline of
Fa Fai’s movements, and when a day passed and
even this was withheld he was content that the shadow
of the many-towered building that contained her should
obscure the sunlight from the window before which
he worked.
While Wei Chang was thus engaged the
door of the enclosure in which he laboured was thrust
cautiously inwards, and presently he became aware
that the being whose individuality was never completely
absent from his thoughts was standing in an expectant
attitude at no great distance from him. As no
other person was present, the craftsmen having departed
in order to consult an oracle that dwelt beneath an
appropriate sign, and Wong Ts’in being by this
time among the Outer Ways seeking an omen as to Fa
Fai’s disposal, Wei Chang did not think it respectful
to become aware of the maiden’s presence until
a persistent distress of her throat compelled him
to recognize the incident.
“Unapproachable perfection,”
he said, with becoming deference, “is it permissible
that in the absence of your enlightened sire you should
descend from your golden eminence and stand, entirely
unattended, at no great distance from so ordinary
a person as myself?”
“Whether it be strictly permissible
or not, it is only on like occasions that she ever
has the opportunity of descending from the solitary
pinnacle referred to,” replied Fa Fai,
not only with no outward appearance of alarm at being
directly addressed by one of a different sex, but
even moving nearer to Wei Chang as she spoke.
“A more essential detail in the circumstances
concerns the length of time that he may be prudently
relied upon to be away?”
“Doubtless several gong-strokes
will intervene before his returning footsteps gladden
our expectant vision,” replied Wei Chang.
“He is spoken of as having set his face towards
the Outer Ways, there perchance to come within the
influence of a portent.”
“Its probable object is not
altogether unknown to the one who stands before you,”
admitted Fa Fai, “and as a dutiful
and affectionate daughter it has become a consideration
with her whether she ought not to press forward, as
it were, to a solution on her own account. . . .
If the one whom I am addressing could divert his attention
from the embellishment of the very inadequate claw
of a wholly superfluous winged dragon, possibly he
might add his sage counsel on that point.”
“It is said that a bull-frog
once rent his throat in a well-meant endeavour to
advise an eagle in the art of flying,” replied
Wei Chang, concealing the bitterness of his heart
beneath an easy tongue. “For this reason
it is inexpedient for earthlings to fix their eyes
on those who dwell in very high places.”
“To the intrepid, very high
places exist solely to be scaled; with others, however,
the only scaling they attempt is lavished on the armour
of preposterous flying monsters, O youth of the House
of Wei!”
“Is it possible,” exclaimed
Wei Chang, moving forward with so sudden an ardour
that the maiden hastily withdrew herself several paces
from beyond his enthusiasm, “is it possible
that this person’s hitherto obscure and execrated
name is indeed known to your incomparable lips?”
“As the one who periodically
casts up the computations of the sums of money due
to those who labour about the earth-yards, it would
be strange if the name had so far escaped my notice,”
replied Fa Fai, with a distance in her voice
that the few paces between them very inadequately
represented. “Certain details engrave themselves
upon the tablets of recollection by their persistence.
For instance, the name of Fang is generally at the
head of each list; that of Wei Chang is invariably
at the foot.”
“It is undeniable,” admitted
Wei Chang, in a tone of well-merited humiliation;
“and the attainment of never having yet applied
a design in such a manner that the copy might be mistaken
for the original has entirely flattened-out this person’s
self-esteem.”
“Doubtless,” suggested
Fa Fai, with delicate encouragement, “there
are other pursuits in which you would disclose a more
highly developed proficiency as that of
watching the gyrations of untamed horses, for example.
Our more immediate need, however, is to discover a
means of defeating the malignity of the detestable
Fang. With this object I have for some time past
secretly applied myself to the task of contriving
a design which, by blending simplicity with picturesque
effect, will enable one person in a given length of
time to achieve the amount of work hitherto done by
two.”
With these auspicious words the accomplished
maiden disclosed a plate of translucent porcelain,
embellished in the manner which she had described.
At the sight of the ingenious way in which trees and
persons, stream and buildings, and objects of a widely
differing nature had been so arranged as to give the
impression that they all existed at the same time,
and were equally visible without undue exertion on
the part of the spectator who regarded them, Wei Chang
could not restrain an exclamation of delight.
“How cunningly imagined is the
device by which objects so varied in size as an orange
and an island can be depicted within the narrow compass
of a porcelain plate without the larger one completely
obliterating the smaller or the smaller becoming actually
invisible by comparison with the other! Hitherto
this unimaginative person had not considered the possibility
of showing other than dragons, demons, spirits, and
the forces which from their celestial nature may be
regarded as possessing no real thickness of substance
and therefore being particularly suitable for treatment
on a flat surface. But this engaging display
might indeed be a scene having an actual existence
at no great space away.”
“Such is assuredly the case,”
admitted Fa Fai. “Within certain
limitations, imposed by this new art of depicting realities
as they are, we may be regarded as standing before
an open window. The important-looking building
on the right is that erected by this person’s
venerated father. Its prosperity is indicated
by the luxurious profusion of the fruit-tree overhanging
it. Pressed somewhat to the back, but of dignified
proportion, are the outer buildings of those who labour
among the clay.”
“In a state of actuality, they
are of measurably less dignified dimensions,”
suggested Wei Chang.
“The objection is inept,”
replied Fa Fai. “The buildings
in question undoubtedly exist at the indicated position.
If, therefore, the actuality is to be maintained,
it is necessary either to raise their stature or to
cut down the trees obscuring them. To this gentle-minded
person the former alternative seemed the less drastic.
As, however, it is regarded in a spirit of no-satisfaction ”
“Proceed, incomparable one,
proceed,” implored Wei Chang. “It
was but a breath of thought, arising from a recollection
of the many times that this incapable person has struck
his unworthy head against the roof-beams of those
nobly-proportioned buildings.”
“The three stunted individuals
crossing the bridge in undignified attitudes are the
debased Fang and two of his mercenary accomplices.
They are, as usual, bending their footsteps in the
direction of the hospitality of a house that announces
its purpose beneath the sign of a spreading bush.
They are positioned as crossing the river to a set
purpose, and the bridge is devoid of a rail in the
hope that on their return they may all fall into the
torrent in a helpless condition and be drowned, to
the satisfaction of the beholders.”
“It would be a fitting conclusion
to their ill-spent lives,” agreed Wei Chang.
“Would it not add to their indignity to depict
them as struggling beneath the waves?”
“It might do so,” admitted
Fa Fai graciously, “but in order to
express the arisement adequately it would be necessary
to display them twice first on the bridge
with their faces turned towards the west, and then
in the flood with their faces towards the east; and
the superficial might hastily assume that the three
on the bridge would rescue the three in the river.”
“You are all-wise,” said
Wei Chang, with well-marked admiration in his voice.
“This person’s suggestion was opaque.”
“In any case,” continued
Fa Fai, with a reassuring glance, “it
is a detail that is not essential to the frustration
of Fang’s malignant scheme, for already well
on its way towards Hien Nan may be seen a trustworthy
junk, laden with two formidable crates, each one containing
fivescore plates of the justly esteemed Wong Ts’in
porcelain.”
“Nevertheless,” maintained
Wei Chang mildly, “the out-passing of Fang would
have been a satisfactory detail of the occurrence.”
“Do not despair,” replied
Fa Fai. “Not idly is it written:
’Destiny has four feet, eight hands and sixteen
eyes: how then shall the ill-doer with only two
of each hope to escape?’ An even more ignominious
end may await Fang, should he escape drowning, for,
conveniently placed by the side of the stream, this
person has introduced a spreading willow-tree.
Any of its lower branches is capable of sustaining
Fang’s weight, should a reliable rope connect
the two.”
“There is something about that
which this person now learns is a willow that distinguishes
it above all the other trees of the design,”
remarked Wei Chang admiringly. “It has a
wild and yet a romantic aspect.”
“This person had not yet chanced
upon a suitable title for the device,” said
Fa Fai, “and a distinguishing name
is necessary, for possibly scores of copies may be
made before its utility is exhausted. Your discriminating
praise shall be accepted as a fortunate omen, and
henceforth this shall be known as the Willow Pattern
Embellishment.”
“The honour of suggesting the
title is more than this commonplace person can reasonably
carry,” protested Wei Chang, feeling that very
little worth considering existed outside the earth-shed.
“Not only scores, but even hundreds of copies
may be required in the process of time, for a crust
of rice-bread and handful of dried figs eaten from
such a plate would be more satisfying than a repast
of many-coursed richness elsewhere.”
In this well-sustained and painless
manner Fa Fai and Wei Chang continued to
express themselves agreeably to each other, until the
lengthening gong-strokes warned the former person that
her absence might inconvenience Wong Ts’in’s
sense of tranquillity on his return, nor did Wei Chang
contest the desirability of a great space intervening
between them should the merchant chance to pass that
way. In the meanwhile Chang had explained many
of the inner details of his craft so that Fa
Fai should the better understand the requirements
of her new art.
“Yet where is the Willow plate
itself?” said the maiden, as she began to arrange
her mind towards departure. “As the colours
were still in a receptive state this person placed
it safely aside for the time. It was somewhat
near the spot where you ”
During the amiable exchange of shafts
of polished conversation Wei Chang had followed Fa
Fai’s indication and had seated himself upon
a low bench without any very definite perception of
his movements. He now arose with the unstudied
haste of one who has inconvenienced a scorpion.
“Alas!” he exclaimed,
in a tone of the acutest mental distress; “can
it be possible that this utterly profane outcast has
so desecrated ”
“Certainly comment of an admittedly
crushing nature has been imposed on this one’s
well-meant handiwork,” said Fa Fai.
With these lightly-barbed words, which were plainly
devised to restore the other person’s face towards
himself, the magnanimous maiden examined the plate
which Wei Chang’s uprising had revealed.
“Not only has the embellishment
suffered no real detriment,” she continued,
after an adequate glance, “but there has been
imparted to the higher lights doubtless
owing to the nature of the fabric in which your lower
half is encased a certain nebulous quality
that adds greatly to the successful effect of the
various tones.”
At the first perception of the indignity
to which he had subjected the entrancing Fa Fai’s
work, and the swift feeling that much more than the
coloured adornment of a plate would thereby be destroyed,
all power of retention had forsaken Wei Chang’s
incapable knees and he sank down heavily upon another
bench. From this dejection the maiden’s
well-chosen encouragement recalled him to a position
of ordinary uprightness.
“A tombstone is lifted from
this person’s mind by your gracefully-placed
words,” he declared, and he was continuing to
indicate the nature of his self-reproach by means of
a suitable analogy when the expression of Fa Fai’s
eyes turned him to a point behind himself. There,
lying on the spot from which he had just risen, was
a second Willow plate, differing in no detail of resemblance
from the first.
“Shadow of the Great Image!”
exclaimed Chang, in an awe-filled voice. “It
is no marvel that miracles should attend your footsteps,
celestial one, but it is incredible that this clay-souled
person should be involved in the display.”
“Yet,” declared Fa
Fai, not hesitating to allude to things as they
existed, in the highly-raised stress of the discovery,
“it would appear that the miracle is not specifically
connected with this person’s feet. Would
you not, in furtherance of this line of suggestion,
place yourself in a similar attitude on yet another
plate, Wei Chang?”
Not without many protests that it
was scarcely becoming thus to sit repeatedly in her
presence, Chang complied with the request, and upon
Fa Fai’s further insistence he continued to impress
himself, as it were, upon a succession of porcelain
plates, with a like result. Not until the eleventh
process was reached did the Willow design begin to
lose its potency.
“Ten perfect copies produced
within as many moments, and not one distinguishable
from the first!” exclaimed Wei Chang, regarding
the array of plates with pleasurable emotion.
“Here is a means of baffling Fang’s crafty
confederacy that will fill Wong Ts’in’s
ears with waves of gladness on his return.”
“Doubtless,” agreed Fa
Fai, with a dark intent. She was standing
by the door of the enclosure in the process of making
her departure, and she regarded Wei Chang with a set
deliberation. “Yet,” she continued
definitely, “if this person possessed that which
was essential to Wong Ts’in’s prosperity,
and Wong Ts’in held that which was necessary
for this one’s tranquillity, a locked bolt would
be upon the one until the other was pledged in return.”
With these opportune words the maiden
vanished, leaving Wei Chang prostrating himself in
spirit before the many-sidedness of her wisdom.
Wong T’sin was not altogether
benevolently inclined towards the universe on his
return a little later. The persistent image of
Fang’s overthreatening act still corroded the
merchant’s throat with bitterness, for on his
right he saw the extinction of his business as unremunerative
if he agreed, and on his left he saw the extinction
of his business as undependable if he refused to agree.
Furthermore, the omens were ill-arranged.
On his way outwards he had encountered
an aged man who possessed two fruit-trees, on which
he relied for sustenance. As Wong Ts’in
drew near, this venerable person carried from his
dwelling two beaten cakes of dog-dung and began to
bury them about the root of the larger tree.
This action, on the part of one who might easily be
a disguised wizard, aroused Wong Ts’in’s
interest.
“Why,” he demanded, “having
two cakes of dung and two fruit-trees, do you not
allot one to each tree, so that both may benefit and
return to you their produce in the time of your necessity?”
“The season promises to be one
of rigour and great need,” replied the other.
“A single cake of dung might not provide sufficient
nourishment for either tree, so that both should wither
away. By reducing life to a bare necessity I
could pass from one harvest to another on the fruit
of this tree alone, but if both should fail I am undone.
To this end I safeguard my existence by ensuring that
at least the better of the two shall thrive.”
“Peace attend your efforts!”
said Wong Ts’in, and he began to retrace his
footsteps, well content.
Yet he had not covered half the distance
back when his progress was impeded by an elderly hag
who fed two goats, whose milk alone preserved her
from starvation. One small measure of dry grass
was all that she was able to provide them with, but
she divided it equally between them, to the discontent
of both.
“The season promises to be one
of rigour and great need,” remarked Wong Ts’in
affably, for the being before him might well be a creature
of another part who had assumed that form for his guidance.
“Why do you not therefore ensure sustenance
to the better of the two goats by devoting to it the
whole of the measure of dry grass? In this way
you would receive at least some nourishment in return
and thereby safeguard your own existence until the
rice is grown again.”
“In the matter of the two goats,”
replied the aged hag, “there is no better, both
being equally stubborn and perverse, though one may
be finer-looking and more vainglorious than the other.
Yet should I foster this one to the detriment of her
fellow, what would be this person’s plight if
haply the weaker died and the stronger broke away
and fled! By treating both alike I retain a double
thread on life, even if neither is capable of much.”
“May the Unseen weigh your labours!”
exclaimed Wong Ts’in in a two-edged voice, and
he departed.
When he reached his own house he would
have closed himself in his own chamber with himself
had not Wei Chang persisted that he sought his master’s
inner ear with a heavy project. This interruption
did not please Wong Ts’in, for he had begun
to recognize the day as being unlucky, yet Chang succeeded
by a device in reaching his side, bearing in his hands
a guarded burden.
Though no written record of this memorable
interview exists, it is now generally admitted that
Wei Chang either involved himself in an unbearably
attenuated caution before he would reveal his errand,
or else that he made a definite allusion to Fa
Fai with a too sudden conciseness, for the slaves
who stood without heard Wong Ts’in clear his
voice of all restraint and express himself freely on
a variety of subjects. But this gave place to
a subdued murmur, ending with the ceremonial breaking
of a plate, and later Wong Ts’in beat on a silver
bell and called for wine and fruit.
The next day Fang presented himself
a few gong-strokes later than the appointed time,
and being met by an unbending word he withdrew the
labour of those whom he controlled. Thenceforth
these men, providing themselves with knives and axes,
surrounded the gate of the earth-yards and by the
pacific argument of their attitudes succeeded in persuading
others who would willingly have continued at their
task that the air of Wong Ts’in’s sheds
was not congenial to their health. Towards Wei
Chang, whose efforts they despised, they raised a cloud
of derision, and presently noticing that henceforth
he invariably clad himself in lower garments of a
dark blue material (to a set purpose that will be
as crystal to the sagacious), they greeted his appearance
with cries of: “Behold the sombre one!
Thou dark leg!” so that this reproach continues
to be hurled even to this day at those in a like case,
though few could answer why.
Long before the stipulated time the
tenscore plates were delivered to Hien Nan. So
greatly were they esteemed, both on account of their
accuracy of unvarying detail and the ingenuity of their
novel embellishment, that orders for scores, hundreds
and even thousands began to arrive from all quarters
of the Empire. The clay enterprise of Wong Ts’in
took upon itself an added lustre, and in order to deal
adequately with so vast an undertaking the grateful
merchant adopted Wei Chang and placed him upon an
equal footing with himself. On the same day Wong
Ts’in honourably fulfilled his spoken word and
the marriage of Wei Chang and Fa Fai took
place, accompanied by the most lavish display of fireworks
and coloured lights that the province had ever seen.
The controlling deities approved, and they had seven
sons, one of whom had seven fingers upon each hand.
All these sons became expert in Wei Chang’s
process of transferring porcelain embellishment, for
some centuries elapsed before it was discovered that
it was not absolutely necessary to sit upon each plate
to produce the desired effect.
This chronicle of an event that is
now regarded as almost classical would not be complete
without an added reference to the ultimate end of
the sordid Fang.
Fallen into disrepute among his fellows
owing to the evil plight towards which he had enticed
them, it became his increasing purpose to frequent
the house beyond the river. On his return at nightfall
he invariably drew aside on reaching the bridge, well
knowing that he could not prudently rely upon his
feet among so insecure a crossing, and composed himself
to sleep amid the rushes. While in this position
one night he was discovered and pushed into the river
by a devout ox (an instrument of high destinies),
where he perished incapably.
Those who found his body, not being
able to withdraw so formidable a weight direct, cast
a rope across the lower branch of a convenient willow-tree
and thus raised it to the shore. In this striking
manner Fa Fai’s definite opinion achieved a
destined end.