About Dream of the Red Chamber
Historical Background
A Dream of Red Mansions was written in the eighteenth century during the reigns of Emperors Kang Hsi, Yung Cheng, and Chien Lung, during the so-called Kangschien Golden Age. During this period, China was governed by Manchu aristocrats, using the social turbulence for their own selfish ends and for consolidating their political positions.
It was during this period that a vast amount of land was annexed and concentrated in the hands of the royal families, the aristocrats, the bureaucratic landlords, and big businessmen, while the peasants who lost their lands were destined to become the landlords' tenants. This social division became a terrible abyss. Even small landlords were often on the brink of bankruptcy. This critical social and economic situation can be seen in the very first chapter of A Dream of Red Mansions: after a devastating fire, a small landlord, Chen Shih-yin, is bankrupt and must seek refuge with his father-in-law.
Many monopoly groups emerged during this period, exploiting the peasants politically and economically. The authors description of the four major families of Chia, Shih, Wang, and Hsueh in the novel (the Chia family being representative of the group as a whole) is deeply rooted in the social reality of the time; this is not a fictional background for the love story which is threaded throughout the novel. Racketeering and extortion flourished in this era. There were corrupt officials at every level, and the usury and heavy levies from the landlords were so unfair and unbearable that the peasants could do nothing but take a fearful gamble: They were forced to revolt. They had no choice. They had to rise up in rebellion against their oppressors — especially in the Hunan and Guichow provinces. Not surprisingly, these torrential peasant uprisings, springing up here and there behind the superficial prosperity of the Kangchien heyday, dealt a heavy blow to the Ching Dynasty.
The people's dissatisfaction with the political corruption of their country can also be found in the historical records, particularly those describing the textile workers' strikes in Soochow and Nanking, where Tsao Hsueh-chin spent his childhood after rising capitalism gained its prominent position in the country's economy.
At the same time, within the elite ruling class of the Ching Dynasty, contradictions and conflicts between different political forces and exploitation cliques became increasingly sharp and tense. In the late years of the Kang Hsi reign, an intense struggle for the seizure of the throne was fought among China's top ruling leaders. Kang Hsi's fourth son, Yin Chen, a very clever, sophisticated person, fiercely wanted to gain his father's throne and went out of his way to make friends with people of all ranks and classes. He was finally successful, and, once in power, he adopted every possible measure to rid the court of all his political enemies — including his father's followers and his own brothers.
The emperor Chien Lung followed Yin Chen's example. Once he came to the throne, he did the same thing. Under his rule, his followers began sealing people's doors, searching people's houses, confiscating their properties, putting dissenters in prison, sending people into exile, and killing them with firing squads. These frightening conditions created a terrifying atmosphere in the court and throughout the country, as well. At this time, Tsao Hsueh-chin's family was not popular with the royal families; therefore, it was clearly on the road to social and financial decline.
This corrupt feudal society and the growth of capitalism form the historical background of Tsao Hsueh-chin's era, and it is also the background against which all the characters in Grand View Garden will play their roles. The main characters of the novel, Chia Pao-yu and Lin Tai-yu, are typical of young people everywhere; they desperately want to be free to marry whomever they wish.
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Leng Tzu-hsing's panoramic overview of the Chia family provides us with a bird's-eye view of the entire Chia family and lays the groundwork for further development of later episodes. The author's emphasis in this chapter is on the Chin family's impending financial ruin. Outwardly grand and wealthy, they seem rich, but their money is almost gone. Furthermore, each new generation of this noble clan will be inferior to the last. These changes indicate the inevitability of the Chia family's decline and deterioration.
Beginning with Chapter 3, the main characters of the novel make their appearances, one after another. In a letter, Tai-yu's father recommends Chia Yu-tsun to Chia Cheng, a brother-in-law who is well-disposed to scholars, and, in turn, Chia Cheng presents a petition to the throne, requesting a position for Yu-tsun. In less than two months, Tu-tsun is appointed prefect of Yingtien (Nanking).
Returning to the time when Yu-tsun first arrived to greet Chin Cheng, we see that earlier he (Yu-tsun) agreed to escort Lin Ju-hai's lovely but delicate daughter, Tai-yu (Black Jade), to the Chin family to be taken care of by her grandmother, Madame Shih Lady Dowager).
When Tai-yu (Black Jade) arrives at the Jung Mansion, she is warmly welcomed by the entire family; however, she decides to watch her step in her new home and to be on guard every moment so that she won't be laughed at for foolish blunders. Without a doubt, Tai-yu is tremendously impressed by the aristocratic Chin family's extravagant way of living (compared with her own background). Here, in her new home, she has a chance to penetrate the hierarchical rites and formalities of a noble family.
After her arrival at the Jung Mansion, Tai-yu is introduced by her grandmother to many members of the Chin family, including two aunts — Lady Hsing and Lady Wang — and to three cousins — Ying-chun (Welcome Spring), Tanchun (Quest Spring), and Hsi-chun (Compassion Spring) — and to a most powerful, clever, and influential person, Wang Hsi-feng (Phoenix), who is the wife of Chin Lien and Tai-yu's sister-in-law.
Interestingly enough, when Madame Wang's son, Chin Pao-yu, is introduced by Lady Dowager to Tai-yu, both Pao-yu and Tai-yu have the feeling that they are old friends, that they are meeting each other again after a long separation. The author describes their meeting and their intimate eye contact in such a careful and romantic way that we are prepared for their relationship to develop into a soul affinity in later chapters.
In Chapter 4, the author tells us that one of the local gentry, Feng Yuan, was beaten to death by the servants of Hsueh Pan (the only son of Tai-yu's Aunt Hsueh, who is Lady Wang's sister). Feng Yuan tried to steal a kidnapped girl, Ying-lien, and Hsueh Pan finally gained legal rights to her. (Coincidentally, this girl is Lotus, Shih-yin's daughter, who was kidnapped several years ago.)
The murder case is brought to the court of Yu-tsun, the new prefect. According to law, Hsueh Pan and his servants should be punished for the murder of Feng Yuan — but because the Hsueh family is on an official "protected list" of the province, Yu-tsun listens to his attendant's advice and changes his mind about the verdict. He realizes that he must curry favor with the Hsueh family if he wants to secure his position. Therefore, Yu-tsun decides to let Hsueh Pan go free — provided that the Hsuehs pay a thousand taels for Feng Yuan's funeral expenses.
This scene clearly illustrates the fact that the Chin, Shih, Wang, and Hsueh families are all very powerful and influential in the province, and that the officials work hand-in-glove with the wealthy, aristocratic families in order to protect their own interests and ensure their own promotions. Because of the protection of the local officials, the aristocratic family members can do whatever they please — even violate the law. The corruption of the officials here, as well as the corruption of the feudal aristocratic families, represents the dark side and the decadence of the feudal system.
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Volume I: Chapters 1–5
Later, Lady Hsueh and her son Hsueh Pan decide to escort his sister Hsueh Pao-chai (Precious Virtue) to the capital, hoping that she will be chosen as a companion for the princesses in their studies. Meantime, Lady Wang is overjoyed to learn that the charges against her nephew (Hsueh Pan) have been dropped. Almost simultaneously, she learns that her sister (Lady Hsueh), Hsueh Pan, and Pao-chai have just arrived at the gate.
Lady Wang embraces her sister, offers them hospitality, and is clearly eager for the family to be "closer together." This "closer together" notion will prove to be interesting. The arrival of Pao-chai, a beautiful and dainty girl of great natural refinement, will lead to many complications and entangling love relationships among Pao-yu, Tai-yu, and Pao-chai in later chapters.
In Chapter 5, the author devotes a good deal of time to describing one of Pao-yu's dreams: Pao-yu was led by the Goddess of Disenchantment to the Illusory Land of Great Void, where he was shown a record and destiny of the twelve foremost beauties in Pao-yu's province (Chinling). The Goddess also initiated Pao-yu into the secrets of sex so intimately and successfully that, in a dream, he made love to a fantasy of Ko-ching (his niece) while sleeping on her bed.
Tsao Hsueh-chin employs the romantic technique of using artistic expression to describe the numerous supernatural characters and events in order to create a mysterious atmosphere. This technique gives a certain fatalistic coloring to the story, but it is an integral part of the artistic structure of the book.
Through the description of the First Register of the Twelve Beauties of Chinling, and the Second and Third Registers of the Twelve Beauties of Chinling, the author anticipates the unfortunate fate of the twelve girls who live in the Jung Mansion, as well as the tragic ending of the novel. These registers and the songs (especially the series called "The Dream of the Red Chamber") are an artistic prelude to the actual, historical facts concerning the decline of these four large, influential families.
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