Page:A history of Chinese literature - Giles.djvu/374

 362 CHINESE LITERATURE

that this stone was some divine talisman, the purpose of which was not for the moment clear, but was doubtless to be revealed by and by. One thing was certain. As this tablet had come into the world with the child, so it should accompany him through life ; and accordingly Pao-yii was accustomed to wear it suspended around his neck. The news of this singular phenomenon spread far and wide. Even Tai-yii had heard of it long before she came to take up her abode with the family.

And so Pao-yii grew up, a wilful, wayward boy. He was a bright, clever fellow and full of fun, but very averse to books. He declared, in fact, that he could not read at all unless he had as fellow-students a young lady on each side of him, to keep his brain clear ! And when his father beat him, as was frequently the case, he would cry out, " Dear girl ! dear girl ! " all the time, in order, as he afterwards explained to his cousins, to take away the pain. Women, he argued, are made of water, with pellucid mobile minds, while men are mostly made of mud, mere lumps of uninformed clay.

By this time he had returned from seeing his mother and was formally introduced to Tai-yti. " Ha ! " cried he, " I have seen her before somewhere. What makes her eyes so red ? Indeed, cousin Tai-yii, we shall have to call you Cry-baby if you cry so much." Here some reference was made to his jade tablet, and this put him into an angry mood at once. None of his cousins had any, he said, and he was not going to wear his any more. A family scene ensued, during which Tai-yii went off to bed and cried herself to sleep.

Shortly after this, Pao-yii's mother's sister was com- pelled by circumstances to seek a residence in the capital. She brought with her a daughter, Pao-ohai,

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