_EASTERN SHAME GIRL_
_Translated from the French of_ GEORGE SOULIE DEMORANT
_Illustrations by_ MARCEL AVOND
_New York Privately Printed 1929_
CONTENTS
EASTERN SHAME GIRL
THE WEDDING OF YA-NEI
A STRANGE DESTINY
THE ERROR OF THE EMBROIDERED SLIPPER
THE COUNTERFEIT OLD WOMAN
THE MONASTERY OF THE ESTEEMED-LOTUS
A COMPLICATED MARRIAGE
_Note:--The original source of the stories appearing in "Eastern Shame Girl" is the classic literature of China in the 17th Century._
EASTERN SHAME GIRL
When there is a great peace Under the gold cup of the sun Joy reaches its flowering.
In the twentieth year of the period Wan-li, there came, among the thousands of students who gathered at Peking for the examinations, a certain Li, whose first name was Chia and his surname Ch'ien-hsi, or "Purified-a-thousand times." His family were from Shao-hsing fu in Chekiang; his father was Judge of the province of Kang-su; and Li himself was the eldest of three brothers. He had studied in the village school from childhood and, not having yet attained to literary rank, had come, according to custom, to present himself for examination at Peking. While in that city, he consorted, before his springtide, with the young libertines, the "willow twigs" of his country; and, in order to gain experience, frequented the theatres and music-halls. Thus he became acquainted with a famous singing girl called Tu, whose first name was Mei, or "Elegance." As she was the tenth of her family, she was known at the theatre as Shih-niang, "The Tenth daughter." A delicate seduction diffused from her: her body was all grace and perfume. The twin arches of her brows held the black which is blue of distant mountains, and her eyes were as deep and bright as autumn lakes. Her face had the glory of the lotus, and her lips the glory of cherries. By what blunder of the gods had this piece of flawless jade fallen in the windy dust, among the flowers beneath the willow? When she was thirteen years old, Shih-niang had already "broken her claws." Now she was nineteen, and it would not be possible to enumerate the young Lords and Princes whose hearts she had besotted, whose thoughts she had set in a turmoil, whose family treasures she had swallowed without compunction. In the theatres, they had composed an epigram about her:
When Tu Shih-niang comes to a banquet The guests drink a thousand great cups Instead of a single small one. When Tu Mei appears upon the stage The actresses look like devils.
It must be said that never, in the young passions of his life, had Li Chia experienced the pain of beauty; but, when he saw Shih-niang, emotion was awakened in him, and the feelings of a flowering willow filled his breast. He himself was gifted with rare beauty, and a sweet and gentle nature. He spent his money recklessly, with an unbridled zeal for bestowing gifts. For this reason he held a double attraction for Shih-niang, who considered that falsehood and avarice were opposed to rectitude, and had also by this time made up her mind to return to a life of honor. She appreciated Li Chia's gentleness and generosity, and was drawn toward him. But he was afraid of his father and did not dare to marry her at once, as she wished. Their love was not, on that account, any the less tender. In the joys of dawn and the pleasures of twilight they kept together as do husband and wife, and in their vows they compared their love with the Ocean or with the Mountain, recognizing no other vital motive. In truth:
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: Eastern Shame Girl by Charles Georges Souli
- 2: So that the matron to whom Shih niang belonged
- 3: And was about to leave Shih niang
- 4: Shih niang waited until the fifth watch
- 5: Shih niang had but just risen from bed
- 6: Next day they thanked Yuch lang again
- 7: Until Shih niang consoled him by
- 8: Shih niang had just arranged her hair
- 9: Sheltering Li Chia under a large parasol
- 10: Li Chia knew that he had only fifty ounces in his purse
- 11: Shih niang put the cups and dishes in order
- 12: Li Chia told this to Shih niang
- 13: Shih niang opened it Inside there were several compartments
- 14: Tu Shih niang nu ch'en pai pao hsiang
- 15: And he said to his father Tieh tieh
- 16: Ya nei was standing on the other ship
- 17: We shall not be long in getting to Ch'i Chow
- 18: Ten bowls of rice at each meal would not be enough
- 19: Her food accumulates in her stomach
- 20: The malady is inside the bones
- 21: Ya nei abased himself in ritual prostration
- 22: One day Erh lang roamed the lakeside
- 23: Erh lang earnestly desired to make himself known in his turn
- 24: The healer drank a draught of burning wine and
- 25: Chou did not come back until eight months later
- 26: Today we buried the daughter of Chou
- 27: The corpse was brought to view
- 28: Is not this the house of Fan and Erh lang
- 29: The guard insisted upon leading Erh lang to prison
- 30: Erh lang had actually believed that he saw a ghost
- 31: But here we have Hang chow and Su chow Lakes
- 32: You have just boasted that you always succeed
- 33: The woman took a slight parcel from her sleeve
- 34: How could he endure such torture
- 35: Until quite recently your slave slept above
- 36: But answer me what happened after ma ma Lu had visited you
- 37: The gaolers made their report to the Governor
- 38: Wu han took from his sleeve the pledges of love
- 39: Wu ban tried to deny the accusation
- 40: Flowering Mulberry sat down and
- 41: Every evening he insisted upon his niece sharing his bed
- 42: The bonzes made this fault known to them
- 43: The bonzes came softly into the cell
- 44: The Lord Wang attempted to stop him
- 45: Again stepped into his palankeen
- 46: And very gently caressed Mei chieh
- 47: Indeed these bonzes are very conscientious
- 48: And the bonzes were quickly overcome
- 49: There lived at Hang chow a doctor named Liu
- 50: The nurse politely made haste to answer
- 51: Yu lang was constrained to disguise himself
- 52: The wife of Liu led Yu lang to the invalid's bed
- 53: Prudence had slipped under the blankets to finish undressing
- 54: But by this time Yu lang was holding her right in his arms
- 55: He went to salute the wife of Liu
- 56: But passing before the marriage pavilion on that day
- 57: Yu lang wishes to return to his parents
- 58: As Liu came up in the meantime
