人亡物在公子填词
蛇影杯弓颦卿绝粒
Lian has been called on a Ministry affair – Xifeng is
reassured, and tells the maid he has not yet returned from business. Zhen receives
the Ministry visitor; there is a serious flood in Henan. This requires Zheng’s
great attention throughout the winter, which in turn allows Baoyu a less
intensive period of study. One day at school, when it is particularly cold,
Tealeaf brings him the Peacock Gold snowcape, which Skybright had mended; he is
persuaded to wear it, with great reluctance. After school he pleads illness and
is exempted the next day’s attendance; Dairu has grown more lenient with age.
Back at home, he refuses to eat, and Aroma has to persuade him to remove the
cape, which he carefully folds. Dejected, he has an early night, but doesn’t
sleep till near dawn, waking half an hour later. The next day it is too cold to
go out; he settles in with some soup and a brazier, and has his writing things
laid out in Skybright’s old room. He invites Musk and Aroma to eat with him
before moving to Skybright’s. He writes her a prayer and an ode, which he then
burns. Feeling better, he goes out into the Garden. He goes in to see Daiyu,
pausing to admire a pair of calligraphic scrolls by her doorway. She is copying
out the sutra; while she works he also admires a newly hung painting of Chang
E. Daiyu reminds him of the allusion in the title. When she finishes a section
of the sutra, they talk, firstly about the Qin. Baoyu mentions hearing her
chant her poem; she responds fairly brusquely, and after some silence he leaves
to see Tanchun.
With him gone, Daiyu sits brooding on his recent
curious behaviour. Snowgoose, meanwhile, has heard from Scribe that Baoyu is
engaged, and tells Nightingale. Hearing Daiyu cough, they whisper about it;
Nightingale is surprised that it has not been mentioned. Snowgoose says she is
sworn to secrecy, but that it is Lady Jia’s idea so as not to distract Baoyu
from his studies. After a misunderstanding, each believes that Daiyu has
overheard them; she was eavesdropping, and had understood their meaning.
Overwhelmed by grief, she resolves to die before feigning sleep – what is life
worth without Baoyu? The two maids continue to discuss the news and whether
Daiyu has heard. The next morning Daiyu wakes early and weeps through her
toilet. She asks Nightingale to light her some incense; Nightingale protests
that work will exhaust her, but she insists. Nightingale weeps too. Daiyu
resolves to destroy her health deliberately; she loses her appetite and begins
to waste away. Baoyu continues to visit, but they become estranged in the
extremity of love. Doctors are called for her, but the cause is put down merely
to her constitution. Soon she can barely eat, refuses to take her medicine and
sees signs of the marriage everywhere; Baochai’s absence confirms her
suspicions. Her life soon hangs by a thread.
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