Chapter - 354 Fresh Alliance of an Old Pledge (11) (1/2)
There amidst the downpour, the two of them walked slowly until they'd left the ridge. Seeing a peasant household, they went in to shelter from the rain. As both were totally soaked from head to toe, they changed into clothing borrowed from the peasant family. Huang Rong put on the worn garments of an old farmer's wife, which she found amusing, when suddenly she heard a series of disappointed groans from Guo Jing in the neighbouring room. Rushing over, she asked: ”What is it?”
Guo Jing, an upset look on his face, had in his hands the painting given to him by Huang Yaoshi. It had so happened that the painting had been damaged by rainwater during the downpour just now. ”What a shame!” repeated Huang Rong.
Taking the canvas from him for a look, she saw that its paper was torn, its strokes of paint blurred. There was already no way it could be refitted and restored. She was just about to put it down when she suddenly noticed that a few extra lines of dim writing had appeared by the side of the poem annotated by Han Shizhong. A closer look revealed that these words had been written on paper interlying between the painting and the sheet it had been mounted on; if it hadn't been for the painting getting soaked, they definitely wouldn't be visible. The disintegration of the rain-soaked paper had made the writing fragmented and difficult to distinguish, but by looking at the form in which it was arranged, Huang Rong could make out there were four sentences in all.
With careful discernment, she read out slowly:
”…posthumous writings of the late…,
…iron palm…,
Middle…peak,
Second…joint.”
The remaining words were so damaged that there was absolutely no way they could be identified.
”It's about The Posthumous Writings of the Late General!” called out Guo Jing.
”Indeed!” said Huang Rong. ”There's no doubt. That bastard Wanyan Honglie assumed the Writings were hidden by the side of the palace's Cuihan Hall. But although he got the stone box, the Writings were nowhere to be seen. It looks like the location of the Writings hinges critically on these four lines of text.”
After murmuring ”…iron palm…middle…joint…” for a while, she added: ”That day at The Villa of the Gathering Clouds, at one point I heard Martial Brother Lu and your six teachers discussing that deceitful guy, Qiu Qianren. They said he was the Chief of the Iron Palm Gang or something. Daddy said that the might of the Iron Palm Gang rocked Sichuan and Hunan; its prestige and reputation really were awesome. Could it be that the Writings actually have something to do with Qiu Qianren?”
Guo Jing shook his head. ”As long as it's Qiu Qianren playing up,” he said, ”I'm not believing any of it!”
”I wouldn't believe it either!” said Huang Rong, with a little laugh.
On the fourteenth day of the seventh month, they arrived within the borders of Northern Jinghu province. (*) The next day, before the stroke of noon, they'd already reached Yuezhou. Leading their horses and loosing the eagles, they asked around for directions, and came by path to Yueyang Tower.
After going up into a nearby restaurant and ordering food and drink, they admired the scenery of Dongting Lake: a sweeping vastness of one blue-green hue spread across ten thousand qing. Towering mountains stood out in every direction, a ring of misty, lofty peaks arrayed in an arc of awe-inspiring majesty. Compared to the hazy waters of Tai Lake, this spectacle was something else entirely. While they enjoyed the view, the food arrived. The cuisine of Hunan was very heavily spiced, and Guo Jing and Huang Rong both felt that it wasn't to their taste; but with such big dishes and such long chopsticks, it nevertheless had a rather generous spirit to it.
The two of them ate some of the food and looked around at the verses inscribed on the four walls. Guo Jing perused Fan Zhongyan's Remarks on Yueyang Tower in silence, but he couldn't help reading out loud when he reached the sentence:
”Be first under heaven to worry,
And last under heaven to rejoice.”
”What do you think about this couplet?” asked Huang Rong.
Guo Jing re-read it silently, pondering to himself and giving no immediate response.
”The writer of this essay was Fan, 'The Just Official',” said Huang Rong. ”At that time, he rocked the Western Xia with his might; a literary talent and an astute tactician, you could say that he had absolutely no equal on earth.”
Guo Jing asked her to describe some of Fan Zhongyan's achievements, and listened as she talked about his various childhood hardships – the poverty of his family, the early death of his father, the remarriage of his mother – and, after he'd attained wealth and honour, everything he did in consideration for the commonfolk. A grave feeling of reverence rising unstoppably within him, Guo Jing solemnly poured a ricebowlful of wine. ”'Be first under heaven to worry, and last under heaven to rejoice.'” he said. ”This is surely what's in the mind of great heroes and great champions!” With that, he lifted his head and drained the wine in a single shot.
Huang Rong laughed. ”Although this sort of person is good for sure,” she said, ”there's so much worry under heaven – and so little joy – that wouldn't he never get to rejoice in his life? I couldn't be like that.”