Chapter 84 Lu Xun Burns All Consecutive Camps; |
The last chapter
closed with the report that the First Ruler had shifted camp in search of cool
shade, and the news was very welcome to Lu Xun. He went forthwith to assure
himself of the truth of the report and observe the new position. A level plain
lay at his feet, whereon he saw something short of ten thousand Shu troops, the
greater part of whom appeared invalids. On the banner of their leader he read
the name Van Leader Hu Ban.
"We consider
these troops children," said Zhou Tai. "Let me and General Han Dang
go out and smite them. I will give the formal guarantee of victory."
The
Commander-in-Chief made no reply, but remained gazing out before him.
Presently he said,
"It seems to me that an air of slaughter is rising over there from that
valley. Surely there is an ambush there. These poor troops in the foreground
are nothing but a bait. No, Gentlemen, do not leave your positions."
Those who heard this
took it only as another proof of the imbecility of their pedant commander.
Next day Hu Ban's
soldiers approached closer and challenged to battle, swaggering about and
brandishing their weapons and shouting volleys of abuse without end. They
manifested contempt by throwing off their armor and clothing and moving to and
fro with the utmost carelessness, bare bodies and naked forms, blatantly
unready to fight. Some even sat or lay asleep.
Xu Sheng and Ding
Feng came to the commander's tent to complain, saying, "Those Shu soldiers
despise us so much. Let us go out and punish them!"
[e] Sun Zi (aka Sun Wu, Sunzi, Suntzu, Sun-tzu, Sun tzu) the author of the famed treatise The Art of War. A general of Wu in the Spring and Autumn period, Sun Zi made her the mightiest state during his lifetime by defeating Chu and conquering Yue. His treatise the Art of War is still avidly read today by many. ..... [e] Wu Qi, aka Wu
Zi, a famous general in the Warring States period. He first served Lu, then
went to Wei, his native, and led Wei army against Qin. He made enemies in
Wei, so he fled to Chu, where King Dao made him prime minister. Wu Qi made
Chu a powerful state; expanded her territory; defended her against Wei, Zhao,
and Han; and attacked Qin. Wu Qi is the author of a military treatise named
"Wu Qi's Art of War". ..... |
But Lu Xun only
smiled, saying, "You see things from the view point of brute courage. You
seem not to know the principles of war laid down by Sun Zi* and Wu Qi*. This
display is only meant to entice us into fight. You will see the pretense
yourselves in about three days."
"In three days
the change of camp will be complete, and the enemy will be too strongly posted
for our success," said they.
"I am just
letting them move their camp."
Xu Sheng and Ding Feng
left the tent also sniggering.
But on the third day
the officers were assembled at a look-out point, whence they saw that the army
under Hu Ban had left.
"There is still
a deadly look over the valley," said Lu Xun, pointing to the hills.
"Liu Bei will soon appear."
Very soon they saw a
whole army all well accoutered pass across the field escorting the First Ruler.
And the sight took away all their courage.
"That is why I
would not listen to those of you who wanted to fight Hu Ban," said Lu Xun.
"Now that the ambush has been withdrawn, we can settle them in about ten
days."
"The proper
time to attack was when they began to transfer their camp. Now they are fully
established with encampments stretching two hundred miles. Having spent seven
or eight months in strengthening where they might be attacked, will it not be
difficult to destroy them?" said they.
"I see you do
not understand how to carry on war. This man Liu Bei is a capable and crafty
man. When he first started on this expedition his methods were of the best, and
he kept them so for a long time, so we have to avoid him. When his troops are
worn out and his thoughts cease to be clear, that will be our day to
attack."
At last they agreed
with their chief.
Lu Xun had already
had the plan whereby the Shu army was to be crushed, and at this stage he wrote
to the Prince of Wu in full details, even naming a day for the victory.
"We have found
another remarkably able leader," said the Prince, "and I have no
further anxiety. They all said he was a useless pedant, and only I knew better.
Reading this letter shows him nothing at all of a pedant."
Then the Prince of
Wu mustered the remainder of his soldiers to hold in reserve.
Meanwhile the First
Ruler had sent orders to hasten the marines down the river and take up stations
along the banks deep in the territory of Wu.
However, Huang Quan
spoke against this, saying, "It is easy enough for the ships to go down,
but how about returning? Let me make the first advance, and Your Majesty may
follow. That will make it more than probable that nothing will go wrong."
"Those Wu enemy
are afraid," objected the First Ruler, "and I want to make a dash at
them. Where is the difficulty?"
Though many others
had spoken against the proposal, the First Ruler did not give up the notion of
going into the forefront of the attack. Then dividing the army into two
portions, he placed Huang Quan in command on the North of the Great River, to
keep a watch on Wei, while he commanded on the South of the Great River. They
made encampments and stations along the bank.
The spies of Wei
duly reported these doings to the Ruler of Wei: "Shu marches against Wu,
erecting forty base camps along two hundred miles of woods and hills. Moreover,
the Ruler of Shu places Huang Quan in command of the North of the Great River. Huang
Quan's marines patrolled as far as thirty miles daily. We do not know their
intention."
The Ruler of Wei
laughed aloud when he heard the details of the long line of camps and the
encampments among the trees and all this.
"Liu Bei is
going to be defeated," said he.
"How do you
know?" asked his courtiers.
"Because Liu
Bei does not know how to wage war. How can he beat off an enemy along a front
of two hundred miles? The maxims of war forbid to camp in open plains, among
marshes, amid precipitous heights and obstacles. He will be defeated at the
hand of Lu Xun, and we shall hear of it in about ten days."
His officers felt
more than doubtful and entreated their master to prepare an army to guard
against Huang Quan, and to attack Shu if the occasion would allow.
But the Ruler of Wei
replied, "I do not plan to attack Shu. If successful, Lu Xun will lead all
his force westward into West River Land, and the South Land will be
defenseless. I shall pretend to send an army to help. I shall send them in
three divisions, and I shall overcome Wu easily."
They all bowed
acquiescence and approval. Then orders went out appointing Cao Ren to lead an
army out to Ruxu, Cao Xiu to take a second out to Dongkou, and Cao Zhen to
command a third aiming at Nanjun, and the three armies were to combine on a
given date for a sudden attack on Wu. The Ruler of Wei would himself bring up
the reinforcement in this southern campaign.
Having reached
Chengdu, Ma Liang lost no time in seeing the Prime Minister and presenting the
plan of the armies as they were in the field.
Said Ma Liang,
"Now the forces are on both sides of the Great River extending along a
front of two hundred miles, with forty stations, each beside a mountain stream
or in a pleasantly shaded forest. At our lord's command, I prepared this map,
and he sent me to ask your opinion."
"Who advised
such an arrangement? He ought to be put to death, whoever it was!" cried
Zhuge Liang, tapping the table at his side.
"It is entirely
our lord's own work. No other had any hand in it," said Ma Liang.
"The life and
energy of the Hans are done indeed," said Zhuge Liang sorrowfully.
"Our lord has committed those very faults which the rules of the Art of
War lay down as to be particularly avoided. The camps are made where free
movement is impossible, and nothing can save him if the enemy use fire. Beside,
what defense is possible along a two-hundred-mile front? Disaster is at hand,
and Lu Xun sees it all, which explains his obstinate refusal to come out into
the open. Go back as quickly as you can, and tell our lord that this will not
do, that it must be changed at once."
"But if I am
too late---if Wu has already attacked and won---, what then?"
"The enemy will
not dare to follow up their victory by a march on Chengdu. So this capital is
secure."
"Why will they
not?"
"Wei is behind
their back: That is why. Our lord will be compelled to shelter in Baidicheng. I
have already placed ten thousand troops in hiding at Fishbelly Creek."
"Have you? I
have been up and down that creek three or four times without seeing a soldier.
I do not see the reason of telling lies to me," said Ma Liang.
"You will see.
Do not ask so many questions."
With the precious
instructions which he had persuaded Zhuge Liang to draw up, Ma Liang hastened
back to the imperial camp, while Zhuge Liang went to the capital to prepare a
relief expedition.
The soldiers of Shu
had become slack and idle and no longer maintained adequate defense, wherefore
Lu Xun perceived that his moment had arrived, and called his generals to his
tent to receive orders.
"There has been
no fighting since I received our lord's command. I have spent the time in
acquiring a knowledge of the enemy. As a preliminary operation I want to
capture a camp on the south bank. Who volunteers?"
Out stepped Han Dang
and Zhou Tai and Ling Tong, all three at once, each crying that he wanted to be
sent. But they were sent back. The Commander-in-Chief did not want any of them.
Then he called up
the junior general, Chunyu Dan, and said, "You will take the fourth camp
on the south side. The commander of that post is Fu Tong. You may have five
thousand troops. I shall support you."
Chunyu Dan took the
order and was gone.
Then Lu Xun summoned
Xu Sheng and Ding Feng and said, "Each of you will take three thousand troops
and bivouac two miles from the camp, so that if Chunyu Dan is repulsed and
pursued, you can rescue him."
Chunyu Dan marched
between the lights and reached the camp he was to capture just after the third
watch. His drums rolled, and he attacked at once. The defenders came out led by
Fu Tong, who, spear ready to thrust, rode straight toward the leader of the
attack and forced him back. Suddenly there arose the roll of other drums, and a
cohort under Zhao Rong barred the way. Chunyu Dan turned off along another
road, escaping with loss of many troops.
But he was not yet
safe. Some distance farther he ran against the Mang tribesmen leader Shamo Ke.
However, Chunyu Dan avoided him also and went on his way, pursued now by three
parties. Soon he reached the spot two miles from the camp, and here the two
leaders of Shu---Xu Sheng and Ding Feng---, who had been placed ready to afford
succor, came out and stopped the pursuit. When the enemy had retired, Chunyu
Dan was escorted back to camp.
He was wounded, and
with the arrow still undrawn he appeared before Lu Xun and apologized for his
failure.
"It was no
fault of yours," said the Commander-in-Chief. "I wanted to test the
force of our enemy. My plan of attack is quite ready."
"The enemy is
very strong and will not be easily overcome," said Xu Sheng and Ding Feng.
"We have now suffered great loss to no purpose."
"This plan of
mine would not hoodwink Zhuge Liang, but happily he is not here. His absence
will allow me to score a great success."
Then he summoned his
generals to receive orders: "Zhu Ran is to lead the marine force. He is to
advance next day afternoon, when the southeast wind will serve. His ships are
laden with reeds and straw, which are to be used as ordered. Han Dang is to
attack the north bank, Zhou Tai the south. Each soldier, in addition to his
weapons, is to carry a bundle of straw or reeds, with sulfur and saltpeter
hidden therein, and each has a piece of tinder. They are to advance, and, when
they reach the Shu camps, they are to start a conflagration. But they are to
burn only alternate camps, twenty in all, leaving the others untouched. They
are to advance and pursue the enemy until they capture Liu Bei."
The leaders received
the orders and so set out.
The First Ruler was
in his own camp, pondering over a plan to destroy the armies of Wu, when
suddenly the staff that bore the great standard in front of his own tent fell
over and lay on the ground. There was no wind to account for this, so he turned
to Cheng Jin and asked what it might portend.
"It means only
one thing: The troops of Wu will raid the camp tonight," said Cheng Jin.
"They will not
dare after the slaughter of yesterday."
"But suppose
that was only a reconnaissance. What then?"
Just then a report
came in that some troops of Wu could be seen, very far off, going along the
hills eastward.
"They are
soldiers meant to put us in confusion," said the First Ruler. "Tell
the generals not to move, but let Guan Xing and Zhang Bao, with a small mounted
force, go out to reconnoiter."
It was dusk when
these two returned, and they then reported: "Fire is seen among the camps
on the north bank."
The Emperor hastily
bade Guan Xing go to rescue the north camps and Zhang Bao to the south to find
out what was really happening. And they started.
About the middle of
the first watch the wind got up and blew strong from the east. Then fire arose
from the camp on the left of the First Ruler's own. He was starting to
extinguish this flame when another fire began in the camp on his right. With
the aid of the strong breeze both fires became fierce, and soon the trees
caught. A confused roar showed the gathering strength of the fire. The soldiers
of the burning camps were rushing into the First Ruler's own camp to escape the
fire, and in their confusion they trampled on each other, so that many died.
Behind them came the
troops of Wu bent on slaughter. Ignorant of how many they might be, the First
Ruler mounted and dashed for Feng Xi's camp, but that also was in flames, which
seemed to rise to the very sky. By this time flames were rising from both sides
of the river, so that everything was as visible as by day.
Feng Xi leaped to
his horse and fled, followed by a band of his mounted troops. This small force
ran against the soldiers of Wu under Xu Sheng. A melee ensued, thereupon the
First Ruler turned and galloped west. Xu Sheng then left Feng Xi and went in
pursuit. Presently the Emperor saw a party of soldiers in the way and became
greatly alarmed.
This was Ding Feng's
army, and the First Ruler was between two foes. In his terror he saw no
possibility of safety, no road was open. Just at this moment another cohort
broke through to his side and rescued him. The leader was Zhang Bao, and he led
the Imperial Guards, who fled, taking the First Ruler with them. As they
marched along, they fell in with another force of Shu; the leader was Fu Tong,
and he joined up with them. The Wu army was still following when the fugitives
reached Saddle Hill. The two leaders, Zhang Bao and Fu Tong, were urging their
lord to go to the top of this and out of immediate danger. Soon Lu Xun arrived
with his army and began to surround the hill. Zhang Bao and Fu Tong held the
road up the hill and kept the enemy from ascending. From the summit could be
seen flames all around, and the First Ruler witnessed the corpses of his
soldiers lay about in heaps or floated in the streams.
Next day, the
soldiers of Wu set themselves to firing the hill. The First Ruler's remaining
escort fled for their lives like rats, and their lord was in despair. Suddenly
he saw a general followed by a dozen horsemen cutting an alley through and
coming up the hill. As he drew nearer the Emperor recognized Guan Xing.
Guan Xing quickly
leapt down, prostrated himself and said, "Your Majesty, the fire is
gaining all round, and this place is not safe. I request you to try to reach
Baidicheng, and as many as possible will gather there."
"Who will dare
stay behind to keep off the enemy?" said the First Ruler.
Fu Tong volunteered,
saying, "I will fight to death to guard the rear!"
It was dusk when
they started. Guan Xing led the way, Zhang Bao protected the First Ruler, and
Fu Tong guarded the rear. They got their lord safely down the hill and away. As
soon as the troops of Wu noticed the flight, they pressed forward, each anxious
to gain kudos by the capture of the Emperor's person. Great armies of Wu,
blotting out the sky and hiding the earth, went westward in pursuit.
The First Ruler
ordered his soldiers to make fires of their clothing and other things in the
road so as to hinder pursuit.
Zhu Ran marched up
from the river to try to intercept the flight, and the noise of his drums was
terrifying.
The First Ruler
thought there was no possibility of escape from this force, and cried,
"This is the end!"
His two nephews
dashed to the front to try to cut a way through, but returned wounded and
bleeding. And the noise of the pursuers came constantly nearer as they found
their way along the valleys. About the first glimpse of dawn the case seemed
quite desperate. But just at the worst they saw Zhu Ran's soldiers suddenly
begin to break up and scatter, tumbling into streams and rolling down
precipices. Soon the reason was evident: A fearsome general leading a cohort
came to their relief.
Once again the First
Ruler was rescued from pressing danger, and this time the rescuer was Zhao Yun.
He had been in Jiangzhou, and news of the straits of his lord had reached him
there. He had set out forthwith. Then he had seen the glow of the burnings and
had marched toward it. And thus he had arrived just at the moment to save his
master when danger was most imminent.
As soon as Lu Xun
heard that Zhao Yun had appeared, he ordered his troops to stop pursuit and
retire. Zhao Yun happening upon Zhu Ran, engaged him forthwith and in the first
encounter slew Zhu Ran with a spear thrust. And so the army of Wu were
dispersed and retired, and the First Ruler got safely to the wall of
Baidicheng.
But on the way
thither his thoughts went back to his companions in misfortune, and he inquired
after them anxiously.
"Though I am
safe, how about the other generals and soldiers?" asked the First Ruler.
"The pursuers
are close upon us, and we cannot wait for anything," said Zhao Yun.
"I wish Your Majesty to get into the city as quickly as possible. While
you are reposing yourself, we may try to rescue some of the leaders."
When the First Ruler
entered Baidicheng, he was in sore straits, only having about a hundred men
left.
A poet wrote
concerning this victory of Lu Xun:
He grips the spear, he kindles fire, the
camps are swept away; |
But Fu Tong, who
commanded the rearguard, was surrounded by the enemy in all eight directions.
Ding Feng shouted to
him, "You had better surrender! Many soldiers of Shu have fallen, more
have surrendered, and your lord is a prisoner. You have no hope against us with
your scanty force."
But Fu Tong replied,
"Shall I, a servant of Han, give in to the curs of Wu?"
Undaunted, he rode
at his opponents and fought many bouts. But his strength and valor availed
naught. Struggle as he would, he could not make his way out. And so he fell
among his enemies.
A poem celebrates
his valiancy:
Wu, at Yiling, strove with Shu, |
The Minister Cheng
Jin, having got clear of the battle, rode swiftly to the river bank and called
to the marines to join in the battle. They landed, but were soon scattered.
One of Cheng Jin's
generals shouted to him: "The soldiers of Wu are upon us. Let us find a
way to escape, Libationer Cheng Jin!"
But Cheng Jin
shouted back, "Since I first followed my lord, I have never yet turned my
back upon the foe."
The enemy surrounded
Cheng Jin, and, as he could do no more, he took his sword and slew himself.
Now Hu Ban and Zhang
Nan had been besieging Yiling. Then came Feng Xi and told of the need of their
lord, and they led off their army to rescue him. Whereupon Sun Huan was set
free as Lu Xun had foretold would happen.
As soon as Sun Huan
was free, he set off in pursuit of Hu Ban, Zhang Nan, and Feng Xi. These two
marched until they met an army of Wu face to face, and so were between two
forces. A desperate battle was fought, and both Zhang Nan and Feng Xi perished
therein.
Hu Ban broke
through. He was pursued, but he luckily fell in with Zhao Yun and got safely to
Baidicheng.
The Mang tribesmen
King Shamo Ke was flying from the battle field when he met Zhou Tai, who slew
him after a short fight.
The two Shu generals
Du Lu and Liu Ning surrendered to Wu, as did many soldiers. Of the stores and
weapons in the camps of Shu nothing was saved.
When the story of
the disaster to Shu reached the South Land, and with it the report that the
First Ruler had been killed in battle, Lady Sun gave way to wild grief. She
rode down to the river bank and, gazing westward, wept and lamented. Then she
threw herself into the stream and was drowned. Posterity erected a temple on
the shore called "The Shrine of the Bold Beauty", and one who described
it wrote a poem:
The Ruler, defeated, fled to Baidicheng, |
There could be no
question that this exploit brought tremendous glory to Lu Xun. Anxious to push
his advantage as far as possible, Lu Xun led his exultant army westward. But as
he drew near to Kui Pass, he suddenly pulled up his horse, remarking that he saw
an aura of death about the mountain side in front.
"We may not yet
advance farther. I suspect an ambush."
So they retreated
three miles and camped in a wide open space. And the army was arrayed ready
against any sudden attack. Meanwhile, scouts were sent out. They returned
reporting no soldiers. Lu Xun doubted and went up to the summit of a hill
whence he could see over the country. The aura was still visible to him, and so
he dispatched other people to spy. But he received the same report: Not a soldier,
not a horse.
Still, as the sun
got lower and lower in the west, he saw the same appearance accentuated, and he
began to feel grave doubts. He sent a confidant to look once more.
This man came back,
saying, "There is not a single soldier, but I have noticed on the river
bank nearly a hundred heaps of boulders."
The
Commander-in-Chief, still doubting, called in several of the natives and
questioned them about the stones.
"Who put them
there? Why did they look so ghastly?" asked Lu Xun.
"We do not
know. This place is called Fishbelly Creek. When Zhuge Liang was going west
into the River Lands, he came along here with a lot of soldiers and heaped up
the boulders like that on the sandy beach. We have seen vapors rising from the
boulders; they seemed to come from inside them."
Lu Xun decided to go
and look at these boulders himself. So he rode off, with a small escort. Looked
down from a declivity, the stones were evidently arranged with a design related
to the eight points of the compass. There were doors and door-sills and
lintels.
"This looks
likely to drive a person out of his senses," he said. "I wonder
whether it is any good."
They rode down with
intent to examine the mysterious arrangement more closely and went in among the
stones.
Presently one of the
escort called attention to the increasing darkness and said, "The sun is
setting. We ought to be returning to camp."
But as Lu Xun
glanced round to look for an exit, a sudden squall came on and the dust whirled
up, obscuring both sky and earth. And in the swirl the stones reared themselves
up like steep mountains, pointed like swords, and the dust and sand shaped
themselves into waves and hillocks one behind the other. The roar of the
boiling river was as the drums before a battle.
"This is some
trick of Zhuge Liang," said Lu Xun in a scared voice, "and I have
been caught."
He would go out, but
he had quite lost his way and could find no exit. As he stopped to consider
what he should do, an old man suddenly appeared.
The old man said,
"Does the General wish to go out?"
"I greatly
desire that you would pilot me out, O Elder!" replied he.
Leaning on his
staff, the old man led the way and with quiet dignity conducted Lu Xun outside.
He had no difficulty in finding his way and paused not a single instant. When
they were once again on the slope, Lu Xun asked his aged guide who he was.
"I am Zhuge
Liang's father-in-law. My name is Huang Chenyan. My son-in-law placed these
boulders here as you see them, and he said they represented the Eight-Array
Maze. They are like eight doors, and according to the scheme are named: Gate of
Rest, Gate of Life, Gate of Injury, Gate of Obstruction, Gate of Prospect, Gate
of Death, Gate of Surprise, and Gate of Openings.
"They are
capable of infinite mutations and would be equal to a hundred thousand
soldiers. As he was leaving, he told me that if any leader of Wu became mazed
in them, I was not to conduct him outside. From a precipice near by I saw you,
General, enter in at the Gate of Death. As I guessed you were ignorant of the
scheme, I knew you would be entangled. But I am of a good disposition and could
not bear that you should be entrapped without possibility of escape, so I came
to guide you to the Gate of Life."
"Have you
studied this matter, Sir?" asked Lu Xun.
"The variations
are inexhaustible, and I could not learn them all."
Lu Xun dismounted,
bowed low before the old man and then rode away.
The famous poet Du
Fu wrote some verses which run something like this:
Planner of three kingdoms, no small
praise |
Lu Xun took his way
to his camp in deep thought.
"This Zhuge
Liang is well named Sleeping Dragon," said he. "I am not his
equal."
Then, to the
amazement of all, Lu Xun gave orders to retire. The officers ventured to
remonstrate, seeing that they had been so successful.
"General, you
have utterly broken the enemy, and Liu Bei is shut up in one small city. It
seems the time to smite, and yet you retire because you have come across a
mysterious arrangement of stones."
"I am not
afraid of the stones, and it is not on their account that I retire. But I fear
Cao Pi. He is no less resourceful than his father, and when he hears I am
marching into Shu, he will certainly attack us. How could I return then?"
The homeward march
began.
On the second day
the scouts brought a report: "Three Wei generals with three armies are
debouching at three different points and moving toward the borders of Wu---Cao
Ren to Ruxu, Cao Xiu to Dongkou, and Cao Zhen to Nanjun. Their intentions are
unclear."
"Just as I
thought," said Lu Xun. "But I am ready for them."
The story of the
retreat will be told in the next chapter.
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