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Chapter 55 Liu Bei Rouses The Spirit Of Lady Sun; |
The bridegroom
turned pale. Bridal apartments lined with weapons of war and waiting maids
armed!
But the housekeeper
of the lady said, "Do not be frightened, O Honorable One! My lady has
always had a taste for warlike things, and her maids have all been taught
fencing as a pastime. That is all it is."
"Not the sort
of thing a wife should ever look at," said Liu Bei. "It makes me feel
cold, and you may have them removed for a time."
The housekeeper went
to her mistress and said, "The weapons in your chamber displease the
handsome one. May we remove them?"
Lady Sun laughed,
saying, "Afraid of a few weapons after half a life time spent in
slaughter!"
But she ordered
their removal and bade the maids take off their swords while they were at work.
That night Liu Bei
and Lady Sun conversed under the moonlight, and the night passed happily
enough.
Next day Liu Bei
distributed gifts among the maids to secure their good will. He also sent Sun
Qian to Jingzhou with news of the wedding, while he gave himself up to feasting
and enjoyment. The Dowager loved him more every day.
The results of the
plot to destroy Liu Bei were thus very different from the originators'
intention. Sun Quan sent to his general:
"My mother had
insisted upon marrying her daughter to Liu Bei; and so by juggling with the
fictitious, we had made it real. What is to be done?"
The news troubled
Zhou Yu day and night, but eventually he thought but another scheme which he
embodied in a letter sent to his master. Here is the outline of the missive:
"Contrary to
expectation, the plot that I, Zhou Yu, contrived has turned the wrong way.
However, since by juggling with deceit, we have ended in a solid truth. Our
future plans must start from the actual present facts. To the boldness of the
adventurer Liu Bei is added the aid of such great leaders as Guan Yu, Zhang
Fei, and Zhao Yun, not to mention that he has a strategist like Zhuge Liang. He
is not the man to remain long in a lowly position. Wherefore I can think of no
better plan than to enervate him by surrounding him with softness and keeping
him in the South Land, a prisoner of luxury. Therefore build for him a fine
palace to blunt the edge of his determination and surround him with sensuous
luxury. In this way the affection of his brothers will be alienated, and Zhuge
Liang will be driven away. When this result has been attained, we can smite him
and so end a great matter. If we be at all careless, I fear the recumbent
dragon may fly to the skies; it is no beast to be kept in a pond. My lord, I
pray you consider this thoroughly."
The letter was shown
to Zhang Zhao who said, "My idea is identical with his. Liu Bei began life
in a humble position and for years has been a wanderer. He has never tasted the
delights of wealth. Give him the means of luxury, a beautiful dwelling, fair
women, gold and silken attire. As he enjoys them, the thoughts of Zhuge Liang
and his brothers will fade away and they, on their side, will be filled with
rancor. Thus can we lay our plans for recovering Jingzhou. I recommend action
as Zhou Yu says and quickly."
Sun Quan then set
about redecorating the Eastern Palace and laying out the grounds. He filled the
rooms with beautiful furniture for his sister and her husband. He also sent
fair damsels and musicians by the score, and many and beautiful vessels in gold
and silver, and silken stuffs. And his mother was delighted at his kindness to
her son-in-law.
Indeed Liu Bei was
soon so immersed in sensuous pleasure that he gave no thought to return. Zhao
Yun and the company under him led an idle life in the front portion of the Eastern
Palace, save that at times they went outside the city for archery and
horse-racing. And thus passed the year.
Suddenly Zhao Yun
remembered the orders he had received and the three bags with the plans in
them. It was time to open the second one for the end of the year was nigh. His
orders were only to open the third when danger was very near and there appeared
no way out.
As already remarked,
the year was drawing to a close, and Zhao Yun saw his lord daily becoming more
and more the slave of pleasure. Liu Bei never appeared among his guards now. So
the bag was opened and in pursuance of the wonderful scheme thereby discovered,
Zhao Yun went to the hall of the Palace and asked to see his master.
The maid in
attendance went within and said, "Zhao Yun has some important matter on
which to see the master."
Liu Bei called him
in and asked what the business was.
Zhao Yun assumed an
attitude of great concern and said, "My lord, you are living happily
secluded in these beautiful apartments. Do you never think of Jingzhou?"
"But what is
the matter that you seem so disturbed?" asked Liu Bei.
"Today early
Zhuge Liang sent a messenger to say that Cao Cao was trying to avenge his last
defeat and was leading five hundred thousand troops to attack Jingzhou, which was
in great danger. And he wished you to return."
"I must speak
to my wife," said Liu Bei.
"If you consult
her, she will be unwilling for you to return. It would be better to say nothing
but to start this evening. Delay may do great damage."
"Retire for a
time. I must act discreetly," said Liu Bei.
Zhao Yun urged the
need to return several times more, but finally went away.
Liu Bei went into
his wife's rooms and began to weep silently.
Seeing his tears,
Lady Sun said, "Why are you so sad, my husband?"
Liu Bei replied,
"I have been driven hither and thither all my life. I was never able to do
my duty to my parents, nor have I been able to sacrifice to my ancestors. I
have been very unfilial. The new year is at hand, and its approach disquiets me
greatly."
"Do not try to
deceive me," said Lady Sun. "I heard and I know all. Just now Zhao
Yun came to tell you Jingzhou was threatened and you wish to return home. That
is why you put forward this excuse."
Then Liu Bei fell on
his knees and said, "Why should I dissemble, O Wife, since you know? I do
not wish to go, but if Jingzhou be lost, I shall be an object of ridicule to
everyone. I do desire to go, but I cannot leave you. Now you know why I am
grieved."
She replied, "I
am your handmaid, and whithersoever you go, it is my duty to follow."
"Yes; your
heart is right, but the difficulty is your mother and the Marquis. They will be
unwilling. If you would have pity on me and let me go for a time-----"
And again the tears
gushed forth.
"Do not be so
sad, my husband," said Lady Sun. "I will implore my mother to let us
go, and she will surely allow it."
"Even supposing
the Dowager permits, I am sure the Marquis will hinder."
Lady Sun said
nothing for a long time while she weighed the matter thoroughly.
Presently she spoke,
"On New Year's Day you and I will go to court and present our
congratulations. Then we will give the excuse of a sacrifice on the river bank
and go away without formal leave. Will that suit you?"
Liu Bei knelt at her
feet and expressed his gratitude.
"I should be
never so grateful," said he. "Dead or alive I would remember your
love. But this must be a perfect secret."
This having been
decided and the arrangements made.
Liu Bei gave Zhao
Yun secret orders, saying, "Lead your company out of the city and be on
the road on New Year's morn. We are going away."
Sun Quan held a
grand court on the New Year's Day of the fifteenth year of Rebuilt Tranquillity
(AD 210).
Liu Bei and his
bride went into the Dowager Marchioness' presence, and Lady Sun said, "My
husband has been thinking of his ancestors, who lie in the county of Zhuo, and
grieves that he cannot do his duty by them. Today we wish to go to the river
side and offer sacrifice toward the north. It is our duty to inform you."
"A very filial
proceeding," said the Dowager. "I should not think of stopping you.
Although you have never known your husband's parents, yet you may go with him
to sacrifice as it is proper for a wife to do."
Both thanked the
Dowager Marchioness and went out, rejoicing at having so far hoodwinked Sun
Quan. Lady Sun got into her carriage taking only a little clothing with her,
while Liu Bei followed with a small escort. They went out of the city of Nanxu
and met Zhao Yun at the place arranged. Then with a guard in front and rear,
they left the precincts of the city, traveling as quickly as they could.
That day, at the new
year banquet, Sun Quan drank freely so that he had to be helped to his chamber,
and the guests left. Before very long the escape of the fugitives became known,
but it was then dark, and when they tried to tell Sun Quan, they could not
rouse him. He slept heavily until the fifth watch.
The next morning,
when Sun Quan heard the story, he asked advice of his counselors.
Zhang Zhao said,
"They have got away today, but trouble will surely come of it. Therefore,
pursue after them without loss of time."
So Chen Wu and Pan
Zhang, with five hundred of veterans, were sent out with orders to use all
speed both by day and by night and bring back the fugitives.
They left. Sun
Quan's anger burned hot against Liu Bei. In his wrath he seized his jade
inkstone and dashed it to the ground where it shivered to pieces.
Said Cheng Pu,
"My lord, your wrath is in vain, for I do not think your generals will
catch the runaways."
"Will they dare
to disobey my order?" said Sun Quan.
"Our young lady
had always delighted to look upon war and is very fierce and determined. All
the officers fear her. Now she has gone with her husband of her own free will;
and those sent in pursuit, if once they look upon her countenance, will not
dare to lay hands on her."
Sun Quan's wrath
burned the more fiercely at these words.
He drew the sword
girded at his side and called up Jiang Qin and Zhou Tai, saying, "You two
take this sword and bring back the heads of my sister and Liu Bei. And if you
do not, I will put you to death."
With this order they
set out in pursuit, leading a whole thousand troops. Meanwhile Liu Bei and his
wife were pressing forward with all speed. When night fell, they rested for a
time by the roadside, but not for long. Just as they reached the confines of
Chaisang, they turned and saw a great cloud of dust and the soldiers said that
a force was coming in pursuit.
"What shall we
do if they come up with us?" said Liu Bei excitedly to Zhao Yun.
"My lord, you
go on in front and I will prevent pursuit."
As they turned the
foot of a hill, they saw a troop of soldiers blocking their road in front.
Two generals were
there and they bellowed, "Liu Bei, dismount and yield yourself captive. We
are here by order of Commander Zhou Yu, and you have kept us waiting
long!"
Now the thought had
come to Zhou Yu that Liu Bei would try to flee, and so he had sent Xu Sheng and
Ding Feng, with three thousand troops, to intercept him at this critical spot.
They had made a camp there and kept a lookout from the hilltops, for Zhou Yu had
calculated that Liu Bei would certainly pass that way. So when Liu Bei and his
cavalcade appeared, they all buckled on their arms and barred the way.
Greatly fearing, Liu
Bei rode back to consult Zhao Yun, to whom he said, "In front a force
barring the road; in rear pursuers. There is no escape. What can we do?"
"Do not be
alarmed, my lord. The Directing Instructor gave me three plans enclosed in
three silken bags. Two have been used and have answered admirably. There is yet
the third, and my orders were to open the bag in such a strait as this. This is
a day of great danger such as calls me to open the bag."
Thereupon Zhao Yun
opened the bag and handed it to Liu Bei.
As soon as Liu Bei
had seen the contents, he hastened to Lady Sun's carriage and began to weep,
saying, "I have something private to say, and I must tell you."
"What have you
to tell me, my husband? Tell me the whole truth," replied she.
"Your brother
and Zhou Yu formerly made a plot for you to marry me, not for your sake, but to
get me into their power and hold me so that they might recover Jingzhou. They
were set on my murder, and you were the bait with which to hook me. Careless of
consequences I came, for I knew that the spirit of a heroine dwelt in your
bosom and you would pity me. Lately I heard that harm was intended me, and so I
made danger to Jingzhou the excuse to escape. Happily for me you have remained
true and come with me. But now the Marquis is pursuing us, and Zhou Yu's
soldiers are in front. Only you, my wife, can extricate us from this danger;
and if you refuse, then slay me where I stand that I may thus show my gratitude
for your kindness."
Lady Sun grew angry
and said, "Then does my brother forget that I am his sister? How will he
ever look me in the face? I can extricate us from this danger."
Thereupon she bade
her people push the carriage to the front. She rolled up the curtains and
herself called out, "Xu Sheng, Ding Feng, are you turned traitors
then?"
The two generals
slid out of their saddles, dropped their arms, and stood meekly in front of the
carriage.
"We are no
traitors," said they. "We have the Commander-in-Chief's orders to
camp here and await Liu Bei."
"Zhou Yu is an
interfering scoundrel," cried she. "We of the land of the south have
never harmed you, and Liu Bei, the Uncle of the Great Family, is my husband. I
have already told my mother and my brother of our journey, and now I find you
with an army at the foot of these hills preventing our passage. Is it that you
would plunder us of our valuables?"
The two generals
mumbled dissent. They would not dare such a thing.
"We pray you, O
Lady, stay your anger. This is no plan of ours. We do but obey our General's
orders."
"So you fear
Zhou Yu and not me!" cried she scornfully. "Think you that if he
slays you, I will not slay him?"
She broke into a
torrent of abuse of Zhou Yu. Then she bade them push her carriage forward.
The two leaders
thought within themselves, "We are but men of lowly rank. We dare not
dispute with Lady Sun."
Beside they saw Zhao
Yun was bursting with wrath. So they ordered their troops to stand aside and
leave the road clear.
The cavalcade had
only gone a few miles when up came the pursuers. The two generals told the
new-comers what had happened.
"You were wrong
to let them pass," said Chen Wu and Pan Zhang. "We have orders from
the Marquis himself to arrest them."
Thereupon all four
went in pursuit.
When the noise of
the approaching force reached the ears of Liu Bei, he said to his wife,
"They are again pursuing us. What now?"
"Husband, go on
in front. Zhao Yun and I will keep them off."
So Liu Bei and a
small company went on toward the river bank, while Zhao Yun reined up beside
the lady's carriage and set out his troops ready for battle. And when the four
generals came up, they dismounted and stood with folded arms.
"What are you
doing here, Generals?" asked Lady Sun.
"We have orders
from our lord to request you and Liu Bei to return."
Calmly but bitterly
she said, "So this is the sort of fools you are! You would make dissension
between brother and sister. But I am a wife on my way to my husband's home. Nor
am I leaving clandestinely, for I had my mother's gracious permission. Now we,
husband and wife, are going to Jingzhou. If even my brother were here himself,
he would let us pass in all politeness. But you, because you have weapons in
your hands, would slay us!"
She abused the four
men to their faces so that they looked from one to another in shame. And each
in his heart thought, "Say what one will, after all they two are brother
and sister and the Dowager Marchioness is the controlling power. Sun Quan is
most obedient and would never dare oppose his mother's decision. When the
reaction comes, then indeed we shall certainly be found in the wrong. We had
better be kind."
Another thing was
that one of the two they sought, Liu Bei, was not there and Zhao Yun looked
angry and dangerous. Finally, muttering to themselves, they gave way and with
one accord retired and left the road open. Lady Sun passed through.
"We four will
go to see the Commander-in-Chief and report," said Xu Sheng.
But that did not
please them all, and they stood irresolute. Presently they saw a column of
troops sweeping down on them like a hurricane. These were Jiang Qin and Zhou
Tai with their company.
"Have you
fellows seen Liu Bei?" they cried as they rushed up.
"He has just
passed along."
"Why did you
not arrest him?"
"Because of
what Lady Sun said."
"That is just
as the Marquis feared, and so he gave us this sword and told us first to slay
his sister and then Liu Bei. And if we disobey, he will put us to death."
"What can be
done? They are far away by now."
Jiang Qin said,
"After all they are but a few and on foot. They cannot travel very fast.
Let Xu Sheng and Ding Feng go to Zhou Yu to tell him, and he can send fast
boats to pursue them on the river while we follow up on the bank. We must get
them either on water or land, and we must not listen to what they say."
Whereupon two went
back to report and four to the river bank. Meanwhile Liu Bei had got a long way
from Chaisang and reached Loving Shore. He now felt calmer. He went along the
bank of the river seeking a boat, but there was no craft on the broad bosom of
the stream. He bowed his head in deep sorrow.
Zhao Yun bade him be
of good courage, saying, "My lord, you have just escaped from the tiger's
jaws and had not far to go. Moreover, I suspect Zhuge Liang has something
prepared for us."
But his master was
despondent. His thoughts were back to the pleasures he had enjoyed but a few
hours since in the house of his wife, and the tears rolled down his cheeks. A
poem has been written on this episode:
By the bank of the deep flowing Great
River |
Liu Bei bade Zhao
Yun go along the bank to seek some boats. Then the soldiers told him there was
a huge cloud of dust on the road. Ascending one of the hills, he looked back
whence they had come and saw the whole earth as it were covered with an
advancing host.
He sighed and said,
"We have fled before them now for days, worn out our soldiers and jaded
our horses, and all to die in a strange place."
He watched the enemy
coming nearer and nearer. Then as things began to look most desperate, he saw a
line of some twenty boats all in the act of setting their sails.
"By good luck
here are some ships," said Zhao Yun. "Let us get on board, row to the
further bank, and see what can be done."
Liu Bei and his
bride hastened down the bank and went into a ship. The soldiers were embarked.
Then they saw in the hold of the ship someone in Taoist dress.
That person came up
with a smile, saying, "My lord, again you see Zhuge Liang. He has waited a
long time."
All the soldiers on
board were from Jingzhou, and Liu Bei rejoiced at the sudden happy turn of
affairs.
Before long the four
pursuing leaders reached the bank.
Zhuge Liang pointed
to them and laughed, saying, "I foresaw this a long time ago. You may
return and tell Zhou Yu not to use the 'Fair Damsel Trick' again."
Those on the bank
sent a flight of arrows at the ships, but they were already too far away. The
four generals on the bank looked very foolish.
As the boats were
sailing along, a great noise was heard on the river behind them, and there
appeared a huge fleet of war ships, sailing under the flag of Zhou Yu. He also
was there in command of the fleet, and he was supported by Huang Gai and Han
Dang. They seemed like a drove of horses and came along swift as a falling
star. They gained on the fugitives rapidly.
Zhuge Liang ordered
the boats to row over to the north bank, and the party landed. They had started
off away from the shore before Zhou Yu could land. Zhou Yu's marines, except
the leaders, were all afoot, but they kept up the pursuit, following as quickly
as they could. Zhou Yu led the pursuit, closely followed by Huang Gai, Han
Dang, Xu Sheng, and Ding Feng.
When Zhou Yu's force
reached the borders of Huangzhou, Liu Bei and his party were not far away, and
so they pressed the pursuit. But there were only horses for a few leaders in
front, and suddenly the rolling of drums struck Zhou Yu's ears, and from out a
gully dashed a troop of swordsmen led by Guan Yu. Zhou Yu was too surprised and
unprepared to do anything but flee.
Zhou Yu fled for his
life and Guan Yu pursued. At different points Liu Bei's generals, Huang Zhong
and Wei Yan, came out and attacked, so that the troops of the South Land
suffered a great defeat, and Zhou Yu barely escaped. As he came to the river
and was going down into his ship, the soldiers of Liu Bei on the bank jeered at
him on account of the miscarriage of his scheme, shouting, "General Zhou
Yu has given Uncle Liu Bei a wife and has lost his soldiers!"
Zhou Yu was so
annoyed that he would have gone up the bank to fight again, but his generals
restrained him.
He uttered, "My
schemes are a failure and a defeat, and how can I face my master again?"
All at once he cried
aloud and fell back in a swoon. His wound had reopened. The generals came to
his help, but it was long before he recovered consciousness.
The fate of Zhou Yu
will appear in the next chapter.
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