Chapter 78 Treating A Headache, A Famous Physician Dies; |
As has been said,
the Prince of Hanzhong swooned on hearing the terrible news of the death of the
two Guans, father and son. His officers went to his help, and when he had
recovered sufficiently, they led him to his private apartments.
"My lord,
control your grief," said Zhuge Liang. "Life and death are fixed by
fate. Guan Yu brought the evil upon himself by his harshness and haughtiness.
You must now take care of your health and mature your vengeance."
"When we swore
brotherhood in the Peach Garden, we pledged ourselves to live or die together.
What enjoyment of riches and honors is there for me now that my brother is
gone?"
Just then he saw
Guan Yu's son, Guan Xing, coming in weeping in deep distress. At sight of the
youth, Liu Bei uttered a great cry and again sank to the earth. By and by he
came to, and spent the whole day weeping and swooning at intervals. For three
days he refused all nourishment, and he wept so bitterly that his garments were
wetted, and there were spots of blood. Zhuge Liang and the others tried every
means to soothe him, but he was inconsolable.
"I swear I will
not live under the same heaven as Sun Quan," cried he.
"It is said
that the head of your brother has been sent to Cao Cao, but Cao Cao has buried
the remains with the rites of a princely noble," said Zhuge Liang.
"Why did he do
that?" asked Liu Bei.
"Because Sun
Quan thought thereby to bring evil upon Cao Cao. But Cao Cao saw through the
subterfuge and has buried your brother with great honor so that your anger may
burn against Wu."
"I want to send
my armies to punish Wu and appease my wrath," said Liu Bei.
"No; you may
not do that. Wu wishes to move you to smite Wei, and Wei wishes you to attack
Wu, each harboring the malevolent design of taking advantage of the quarrel.
You would do well, my lord, to keep your armies at home. Put on mourning for
Guan Yu, and wait till Wei and Wu are at war. That will be your time."
The other officers
supported Zhuge Liang, and Liu Bei listened. Presently his grief spent itself,
and he began to take food again. An edict was promulgated enjoining mourning
dress upon all officials. The Prince went outside the south gate to summon the
spirit home, and sacrificed and wailed a whole day for the dead warrior, his
brother.
In Luoyang, although
Cao Cao had given honorable burial to the remains of Guan Yu, yet he was
continually haunted by the dead man's spirit. Every night when he closed his
eyes, he saw Guan Yu as he knew the warrior so well in the flesh. These visions
made him nervous, and he sought the advice of his officers. Some suggested the
building of new rooms for his own use.
"There is much
witchcraft and malign influence in this old palace at Luoyang. Build a new
palace for your own occupation," said they.
"I would, and
it should be called 'The New Foundation'," said he. "But where is the
good architect?"
Jia Xu said,
"There is one Su Yue, a very cunning artificer in Luoyang."
Su Yue was called
and set to work on the plans for a nine-hall pavilion for Cao Cao's own use. It
had verandahs and upper rooms as well. His plans pleased Cao Cao greatly.
"You have
planned just such a place as I wished, only where will you find the main beam
for such a building?"
"I know a
certain tree that will serve," said the architect. "About ten miles
from the city there is the Pool of the Leaping Dragon. Near it is a shrine, and
beside that grows a fine pear tree. It is over a hundred spans high, and that
will serve for the roof tree."
Cao Cao at once sent
people to fell the tree. But after one whole day of labor they came back to say
they could make no impression on it neither with saw nor ax. Cao Cao, doubting
their word, went to see. When he had dismounted and stood by the tree, he could
not but admire its size and proportions, as it rose above him tall, straight
and branched till the wide-spreading and symmetrical top reached into the
clouds. But he bade the men attack it again.
Then a few aged
people of the village came and said, "The tree has stood here some
centuries and is the haunt of a spirit. We think it should not be cut
down."
Cao Cao grew
annoyed, saying, "I have gone to and fro in the world now some thirty
years, and there is no one, from the Emperor to the commoner, who does not fear
me. What spirit is there who dares oppose my wish?"
Drawing the sword he
was wearing, Cao Cao went up to the tree and slashed at the trunk. The tree
groaned as he struck, and blood stains spattered his dress. Terror-stricken, he
threw down the sword, mounted his horse and galloped off.
But that evening
when he retired to rest, he could not sleep. He rose, went into the outer room,
and sat there leaning on a low table. Suddenly a man appeared with his hair
unbound, dressed in black and carrying a naked sword.
The visitor came
straight toward Cao Cao, stopped in front of him and, pointing, cried out,
"Behold the Spirit of the Pear Tree! You may desire to build your
nine-hall pavilion, and you may contemplate rebellion. But when you began to
attack my sacred tree, the number of your days was accomplished. I am come now
to slay you."
"Where are the
guards?" shouted Cao Cao in terror.
The figure struck at
him with the sword. Cao Cao cried out and then awoke. His head was aching
unbearably.
They sought the best
physicians for him, but they failed to relieve the terrible pain. Sympathy for
their lord was universal among Cao Cao's subordinates.
Hua Xin one day said
to his master, "My lord, have you heard of Hua Tuo?"
"Do you mean
him of Qiao who cured Zhou Tai?"
"Yes; that is
he," replied Hua Xin.
"I have heard
something of his fame, but I know nothing of his capabilities in his art."
"He is very
clever; there are few so skillful. If one is ill and calls him in, he knows
immediately whether to use drugs, or the needle, or the cutlery, and the
patient finds relief at once. Let one suffer from an internal complaint and
drugs are ineffectual, with a dose of hashish he throws the patient into a
state of perfect insensibility and then opens the abdomen and washes the
affected organs with a medicament. The patient feels no pain. When the
cleansing is complete, he sews up the wound with thread, dresses it, and in a
month or less the patient is well. This shows you how skillful he is.
"One day Hua
Tuo was traveling, when he heard a man by the wayside groaning with pain. 'That
is dyspepsia,' said Hua Tuo. And further questions confirmed the diagnosis. He
prescribed long draughts of the juice of garlic as an emetic, and the man
vomited a worm. After this the man was quite well.
"Chen Deng, the
Governor of Guangling, suffered from a heavy feeling at the heart. His face was
red and congested, and he had no appetite. Hua Tuo gave him a drug, and he
threw up many internal wriggling parasites with red heads. The Governor asked
what had caused the trouble, and Hua Tuo told him that he ate too much strong
smelling fish. He could cure Chen Deng this once, but in three years the
disease would recur, and then nothing could save him. Three later Chen Deng
died.
"Another man
had a tumor between the eyes, and it itched intolerably. Hua Tuo examined it
and said there was a bird in it. The tumor was opened, and, surely enough, a
canary flew out. The patient was relieved.
[e] Bian Que is the earliest of the legendary doctors of Chinese medicine after the time of the Yellow Emperor and his advisors. Credited with incredible healing knowledge, stories of his life and treatments are used in teaching and known to all Chinese medicine practitioners today. ..... |
"A dog bit a
man's toe, and two tumorous growths ensued, one of which itched intolerably and
the other pained severely. Hua Tuo said the painful one contained ten needles,
and the other a couple of chess pips, black and white. He opened the two
swellings, and the contents were as he had said. Really he is of the same class
of physician as masters Bian Que* and Zang Kong of old times. He lives at
Jincheng, not far away, and could be here very soon."
Cao Cao summoned
him. As soon as he arrived, Hua Tuo felt the pulse and made careful
examination.
"Prince, your
headaches are due to a malignant humor within the brain case. The humor is too
thick to get out. Swallowing drugs will do no good. But I propose to administer
a dose of hashish, then open the brain case and remove the thickened humor.
That will be a radical cure."
"You mean you
want to kill me?" cried Cao Cao angrily.
"O Prince, you
have heard how I cured Guan Yu of the poison that had got into his bones? I
scraped them, and he did not hesitate a moment. Your malady is trifling, and
why do you mistrust me?"
"A painful arm
may be scraped, but how can you cut open a man's head? The fact is you have
conspired with some of Guan Yu's friends to take this opportunity to make away
with me in revenge for his death."
Cao Cao told his
lictors to hale Hua Tuo to gaol, and there he was tortured to try to find who
were his accomplices.
Jia Xu pleaded for
him, saying, "The man possesses rare skills. To kill him is to waste his
talents."
But the intervention
was of no avail.
"The man wants
to get a chance to kill me. He is the same sort of scoundrel as Ji Ping."
The wretched
physician was subjected to worse sufferings.
His gaoler was a
certain Wu, nicknamed "The Gaoler" by nearly everybody. He was kindly
disposed to Hua Tuo and saw that Hua Tuo was well fed.
Hua Tuo conceived a
liking for his gaoler and said to him one day, "I am doomed, I know. The
pity is that my Black Bag treatise on medicine may be lost. You have been most
kind to me, and as I have no other way of recompensing you, I will give you a
letter to my wife telling her to send the Black Bag, and I will give it to you
that you may carry on my art."
Wu the Gaoler
rejoiced greatly, saying, "If I have that book, I will throw away the
menial position of gaoler, travel about the country healing sick folks, and
spread your virtue."
The letter was
written and given to Wu the Gaoler, who lost no time in traveling to Jincheng
to meet with Hua Tuo's wife, and she gave him the Black Bag to bring back to
Hua Tuo. After Hua Tuo had read through the book carefully, he presented it to
Wu the Gaoler, who took it home and hid it away.
Ten days after this,
Hua Tuo died in prison. Wu the Gaoler bought a coffin and had him buried. This
done, he quitted the prison and went home. But when he asked for the book, he
found that his wife had discovered it and was using it to light the fire. He
snatched away what was left of it, but a whole volume was missing, and what was
left amounted only to several pages. He vented his anger in cursing his wife.
But she retorted,
saying, "If you become such a learned person as Hua Tuo, you will only die
in prison like him. What good did it all do him?"
It struck Wu the
Gaoler that there was something in what she said, and he ceased grumbling at
her. But the upshot of all this was that the learning in the "Treatise of
the Black Bag" was finally lost to the world, for what was left only
contained the recipes relating to domestic animals.
Hua Tuo was the ablest of physician, |
Meanwhile, Cao Cao
became worse, the uncertainty of the intentions of his rivals aggravating his
disease not a little. Then they said an envoy had come with letter from Wu, and
it ran like this:
"Thy servant,
Sun Quan, has long seen destiny indicates Your Highness as master of all, and
looks forward with confidence to your early accession to the dignity of the Son
of God. If you will send your armies to destroy Liu Bei and sweep rebellion from
the two River Lands, thy servant at the head of his armies will submit and
accept his land as a fief."
Cao Cao laughed as
he read this, and he said to his officers, "Is this youth trying to put me
on a furnace?"
But Minister Chen
Qun and the attendants seriously replied, "O Prince, the Hans have been
feeble too long, while your virtues and merits are like the mountains. All the
people look to you, and when Sun Quan acknowledged himself as your minister, he
is but responsive to the will of God and the desire of humans. It is wrong that
you oppose when such contrary influences work to a common end, and you must
soon ascend to the high place."
[e] King Wen, aka the Scholar King, founder of the Zhou Dynasty, father of King Wu. King Wen did not actually founded the dynasty, but he laid the foundation for Zhou. At the end of Shang Dynasty, the state Zhou of King Wen had already possessed two-thirds of the empire, but King Wen still faithfully served the last emperor of Shang. The final conquest was completed by King Wu and King Wu's brother, the Duke of Zhou. ..... |
Cao Cao smiled.
"I have served the Hans for many years. Even if I have acquired some
merit, yet I have been rewarded with a princedom and high rank. I dare not
aspire to greater things. If the finger of heaven points to me, then shall I be
as King Wen of Zhou*."
"As Sun Quan
acknowledges himself your servant and promises obedience, you, my lord, can
confer a title upon him and assign to him the duty of attacking Liu Bei,"
said Sima Yi.
Approving of the
suggestion, Cao Cao gave Sun Quan the titles of General of the Flying Cavalry
and Lord of Nanzhang, and appointed him to the Imperial Protectorship of
Jingzhou. Forthwith this command was sent away to Sun Quan.
Cao Cao's condition
grew worse daily. One night he had a dream of three horses feeding out of the
same manger.
Next day he told it
to Jia Xu, saying, "I saw three horses feeding on the same manger before
the family of Ma Teng was harmed. Last night I saw the same dream again. How do
you interpret it?"
"The horses
were feeding on bounty: It is auspicious to dream of dignity," replied Jia
Xu. "And naturally such an honor comes to the Caos. I do not think you
need feel any misgivings."
Cao Cao was
comforted.
Cao Cao dreamed three steeds together
fed, |
That night Cao Cao
became worse. As he lay on his couch he felt dizzy and could not see, so he
rose and sat by a table, upon which he leaned. It seemed to him that someone
shrieked, and, peering into the darkness, he perceived the forms of many of his
victims---the Empress Fu, the Consort Dong, Fu Wan, Dong Cheng, and more than
twenty other officials---, and all were bloodstained. They stood in the
obscurity and whispered, demanding his life. He rose, lifted his sword and
threw it wildly into the air. Just then there was a loud crash, and the
southwest corner of the new building came down. And Cao Cao fell with it. His
attendants raised him and bore him to another palace, where he might lie at
peace.
But he found no
peace. The next night was disturbed by the ceaseless wailing of men and women's
voices.
When day dawned, Cao
Cao sent for his officers, and said to them, "Thirty years have I spent in
the turmoil of war and have always refused belief in the supernatural. But what
does all this mean?"
"O Prince, you
should summon the Taoists to offer sacrifices and prayers," said they.
Cao Cao sighed,
saying, "The Wise Teacher said, 'He who offends against heaven has no one
to pray to.' I feel that my fate is accomplished, my days have run, and there
is no help."
But he would not
consent to call in the priests. Next day his symptoms were worse. He was
panting and could no longer see distinctly. He sent hastily for Xiahou Dun, who
came at once. But as Xiahou Dun drew near the doors, he too saw the shadowy
forms of the slain Empress and her children and many other victims of Cao Cao's
cruelty. He was overcome with fear and fell to the ground. The servants raised
him and led him away, very ill.
Then Cao Cao called
in four of his trusty advisers---Cao Hong, Chen Qun, Jia Xu, and Sima Yi---that
they might hear his last wishes.
Cao Hong, speaking
for the four, said, "Take good care of your precious self, O Prince, that
you may quickly recover."
But Cao Cao said,
"Thirty and more years have I gone up and down, and many bold leaders have
fallen before me. The only ones that remain are Sun Quan in the south and Liu
Bei in the west. I have not yet slain them. Now I am very ill, and I shall never
again stand before you; wherefore my family affairs must be settled. My first
born---Cao Ang, son of Lady Liu---fell in battle at Wancheng, when he was
young. The Lady Bian bore four sons to me, as you know. The third, Cao Zhi, was
my favorite, but he was vain and unreliable, fond of wine and lax in morals.
Therefore he is not my heir. My second son, Cao Zhang, is valiant, but
imprudent. The fourth, Cao Xiong, is a weakly and may not live long. My eldest,
Cao Pi, is steady and serious; he is fit to succeed me; and I look to you to
support him."
Cao Hong and the
others wept as they heard these words, and they left the chamber. Then Cao Cao
bade his servants bring all of the rare incenses and fragrances that he burned
every day, and he handed out to his handmaids.
And he said to them,
"After my death you must diligently attend to your womanly labors. You can
make silken shoes for sale, and so earn your own living."
He also bade them go
on living in the Bronze Bird Pavilion and celebrate a daily sacrifice for him,
with music by the singing women, and presentation of the eatables laid before
his tablet.
Next he commanded
that seventy-two sites for a tomb should be selected near Jiangwu, that no one
should know his actual burying place, lest his remains should be dug up.
And when these final
orders had been given, he sighed a few times, shed some tears, and died. He was
sixty-six, and passed away in the first month of the twenty-fifth year of
Rebuilt Tranquillity Era (AD 220).
A certain poet
composed "A Song of Yejun" expressing sympathy for Cao Cao, which is
given here:
I stood in Yejun and saw the River Zhang |
As Cao Cao breathed
his last, the whole of those present raised a great wailing and lamentation.
The news was sent to the members of the family, the Heir Cao Pi, Lord of
Yanling Cao Zhang, Lord of Linzi Cao Zhi, and Lord of Xiaohuai Cao Xiong. They
wrapped the body in its shroud, enclosed it in a silver shell, and laid it in a
golden coffin, which was sent at once home to Yejun.
The eldest son wept
aloud at the tidings and went out with all his following to meet the procession
and escort the body of his father into his home. The coffin was laid in a great
hall beside the main building, and all the officials in deep mourning wailed in
the hall.
Suddenly one stood
out from the ranks of the mourners and said, "I would request the heir to
cease lamentation for the dead and devote himself to the present needs of
state."
It was Sima Fu, and
he continued, "The death of the Prince will cause an upheaval in the
empire, and it is essential that the heir should assume his dignity without
loss of time. There is not mourning alone to be seen to."
The others replied.
"The succession is settled, but the investiture can hardly proceed without
the necessary edict from the Emperor. That must be secured."
Said Chen Jiao, who
was Minister of War, "As the Prince died away from home, it may be that
disputes will ensue, and the country will be in danger."
Then Chen Jiao
slashed off the sleeves of his robe with a sword and shouted fiercely, "We
will invest the prince forthwith, and anyone who does not agree, let him be
treated as this robe."
Still fear held most
of the assembly. Then arrived Hua Xin most haste from the capital. They
wondered what his sudden arrival meant.
Soon he entered the
hall and said, "The Prince of Wei is dead and the world is in commotion.
Why do you not invest his successor quickly?"
"We await the
command," cried they in chorus, "and also the order of
Princess-Mother Bian concerning the heirship."
"I have
procured the imperial edict here," cried he, pulling it out from his
breast.
They all jumped up
and down to shout their congratulations. And Hua Xin read the edict.
Hua Xin had always
been devoted to Wei. As soon as he knew of Cao Cao's death, he drafted this
edict and got it sealed by Emperor Xian almost by force. However, there it was:
Therein Cao Pi was named as Prince of Wei, First Minister, and Imperial
Protector of Jizhou."
Cao Pi thereupon
took his seat in the princely place and received the exultant congratulations
of all the officers. This was followed by a great banquet.
However, all was not
to pass too smoothly. While the banquet was in progress, the news came:
"Cao Zhang, Lord of Yanling, with an army of one hundred thousand troops,
is approaching from Changan."
In a state of
consternation, the new Prince turned to his courtiers, saying, "What shall
I do? This young, golden-bearded brother of mine, always obstinate and
determined and with no little military skill, is marching hither with an army
to contest my inheritance."
"Let me go to
see the Marquis. I can make him desist," said one of the guests.
The others cried,
"Only yourself, O Exalted One, can save us in this peril!"
If you would know
who proposed himself as envoy, read the next chapter.
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