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(Play All)Formal story texts: The Story of General Xiang
1.2: The Story of General Xiang
Tian Jinggui, Dianfang Township, Longshan County
recorded on 30 May 2002
This text tells the traditional story of General Xiang, one of the three great quasi-historical (c.10th century) heroes of the Tujia in Xiangxi, along with Hero Tian and Duke Peng. The tale contrasts the integrity of General Xiang with the duplicity of the emperor. Even in death General Xiang's integrity wins the day. This is a prepared text, written down using Chinese characters as phonetic aide-memoires to indicate Tujia words.
01 |
ba3ti3
xian2lao1guan1reng3-nie3
gu1
lao4
li3.
Let me tell you the story of General Xiang. |
02 |
xian1xi1
bi2zi1ka3
wo2tu1
hu2ni1
ha4ri3-nie3
di1ga3-nie3
luo4
suo1
hu3
xie2, la2
hu3
peng3gong1
jiao2zu1,
la2
hu3
xian2lao1guan1reng3, sang1
hu3
tian3hao1hang2.
lei4
mo3
xian2lao1guan1reng3-nie3
gu1
lao4
li3.
Every Tujia person in Xiangxi has heard of these three great historical figures: Duke Peng, General Xiang, and Hero Tian. Today I'm going to tell you the story of General Xiang. |
03 |
xian2lao1guan1reng3
nie2kuo3lai2
jie3-la1,
sa3li3-hhe1,
wu1ni3zi3
xie2. ai1
la2
long1,
long3ma3zui1
pu2meng3
a3si3
lao4
ci1ba1
ti3-lie3
luo4
zu2-diu2.
General Xiang's real name was Ye Kelai. He was an eloquent speaker, and also excelled in martial arts. He became famous one year after obtaining a white dragon-horse at Longmazui. |
04 |
tu1wan3
guo2
bo3
sa3
si4-lie3
ga2me1
lao4
po1-lie3,
luo4die1
guo2
jiu1
xian2lao1guan1reng3
jie3-la1.
The local Tujia chieftain made him an official, and so people called him General Xiang. |
05 |
huan3di2
ha4ri3-lie3
guo2
yi3-ya1ca1, tu1wan3
jiu1
guo2
duo3
jing2gong1-xie2,
guo2
li2
ta2pa4
ce2ce1-die1
huo3-bo3,
ma4
a3si3
jia1-lie3
jing1ceng3
ye4.
When the emperor heard about him he wanted to meet him, so the chieftain sent him to the capital to pay tribute. He arrived in the capital, riding on his white horse, and bearing tiger skins, honey, and other local products. |
06 |
huan3di2
guo2
ka4,
re2
hu3-zu2
guo2
si1lie3: "luo4
li3-xi2
xi4,
se2
eng1ge1
ye3
tai2,
kuo1
tai2,
ngo4
tai2,
kang3ku1-nie3
ye3
huo3-bo3
wo1
si2,
sou3ma1?"
The emperor held a banquet for him, and when they were drinking wine together, he said to Xiang: "I hear your area is very poor, and has no gold, silver, or any other valuable goods, so you had to bring me these local products as tribute - isn't that so?" |
07 |
xian2lao1guan1reng3
nie4-bo3
li3:
"eng1di1
ye3-die1
kuo1-nie3
ngo4-nie3
ai1
ya
ca2-nie1, kuo1
xie2
ngo4
xie2,
pii1-duo3-ta1ti1;
ang2
ge3
sang1
zou1
lu2
dong2
a,
kuo1
ri3
ngo4
ri3, ai1ya1
pu2
pu3
xie2,
xie2-xi3tai2
a!"
General Xiang smiled and said: "These gifts are better than silver and gold, they cannot be bought with gold or silver. In our three prefectures and six districts there is gold and silver everywhere, as well as dragons and phoenixes, truly we are very rich!" |
08 |
huan3di2
guo2
si1lie3:
"se2
cu1
qi2ma1
la?"
Then the emperor asked: "What is your home like?" |
09 |
xian2lao1guan1reng3
li3:
"ang2
cu1
xie2ma1ka3
ze3-da2,
hi2
hi2
hi2
ka3tong3
li4ti3
ti1,
hi2
hi2
hi2
hi2
la1meng3
zu2
qi4lie3;
General Xiang replied: "My house is not like a rich man's house, as it is only built on a thousand pillars and there are but ten thousand doors. |
10 |
re2su4
ruo4
hhi3,
su3su3
tie4tie3
ti2-nie3
cuo4; [ye3]
hi2-nie3
luo4
ka3
wo4,
[nie3]
hi2-nie3
luo4
ce3
ke4; bu4
suo1
ca1
ce3
da3
mo3
la2bu1
ye4.
ai1
la2
nie1
bang2
tang1
ruo4
lao4
ha3-lie3 suo1
nie1
la2bu1
ga2-ci3
tai2
a!"
The wind sweeps the floor and the moon lights the lanterns in the house. Eighty carry firewood and seventy draw water; three salt-barges ferry salt. Once, when one of them overturned on the Last Eagle shoals, we had to do without salt for three days!" |
11 |
huan3di2
me3
wo2tu1
ge4
mo3
si1lie3:
"se2
cu1
luo4
he2la3
xie2,
ye3
ga2-ci3
xie2
ma?"
The emperor was secretly amazed, so he asked: "There are so many people in your house, do they all have enough to eat?" |
12 |
xian2lao1guan1reng3
li3: "ang2
cu1,
qiao2
ge3la1bi1
a3bu3
cuo4,
qiao2
gu3la1bi1
tuo2ga1
xie2, la2
cuo4
he1he1
ye3
cu4
mo3
ku1za4
da4ze3.
General Xiang replied: "On one side of my house is a barn for kudzu vine, and on the other a barn for bracken; the food in them is heaped up like mountains. |
13 |
suo1
qi1
ta2ci1-nie3
yan1si1
huo3lie3
cuo4
la1meng3
tong2, ye3
di4
ye3
ong1-xie2,
ong1-lie3
tuo1-ta1-duo3."
The key to the barns weighs three and a half pounds, and if anyone wants food, they can just take as much they want, without having to pay anything back." |
14 |
hang2la3,
xian2lao1guan1reng3
ka3
cu1
ye3
tai2,
mu4nie3
huo3lie3
wo3-bo3-xi2,
dong3qi2dong3ga2-nie3
ka1ba1
cuo4
la2
cuo1
xie2.
In actual fact, General Xiang's family was very poor. They lived in a decrepit thatched hut where there were huge gaps in the bamboo walls. |
15 |
ye3
hi2
se1tong1-nie3
a3ba1 ka3
wo4,
nie3
hi2
se1tong1-nie3
a1nie3
ce3
ke4;
guo2
a,
suo1
qi1
ta2ci1-nie3
pii1ki1
be4-lie3
a3bu3
tuo2ga1
di3-bo3
nie4ka1.
His eighty year old father carried firewood and his seventy year old mother fetched water, whilst he shouldered his three and a half pound hoe to go and dig for kudzu vine and bracken to enable them to survive. |
16 |
sa4
suo1
long3
long4-bo3-la1,
sa4lie1
huo3lie3
la2bu1
a2li1
mo3
ga2. ai1
la2
nie1,
bang2
guo2
lao4
di1die4-lu3,
sa4lie1
tao2,
suo1
nie1
la2bu1
ga2-ci3
tao2.
He kept three ducks, to get a bit of salt by bartering their eggs, but one day an eagle carried off one of the ducks, so for three days there were no eggs or salt. |
17 |
huan3di2
li3:
"se2
ge3
ye3
gei4di3
a,
yi2si1
tu1mang3zi3, qiao2se1-nie3
luo4
tai2,
sa3
tie2ba1
ri1-ta1ti1."
The emperor went on to say: "You lot, you are all barbarians, there are no capable men who can do great deeds." |
18 |
xian2lao1guan1reng3
me3-lie1
he2ba3
mo3
li3:
"ang2ni1
a,
sang1
zou1
wo3
dong2
a,
qiao2se1
ca2-nie3
luo4
xie2, li3-hhe1,
ri1-hhe1; ce3
da3
mo3
pu2
xi4,
ku1ca4
gu3-bo3
li2
ji1, re2su4
me2ze3
jie3,
seng3xian3
guo2
duo3
ge4."
General Xiang replied haughtily: "Our three prefectures and six districts are full of able men, both with pen and sword; they wrestle with the flood dragon in the rivers, and catch tigers in the mountains; the wind and rain are at their beck and call, and even the immortals submit to them." |
19 |
zeng1
li3-nie3-zu2,
li3-nie3
jing2
ca2-zu2,
hou2gong1
mi4
gi3-liao3,
huan3di2
ge4
mo3
qi2ma1
ri1-duo3
ha1tai2,
Just as he was warming to his subject, the concubines' palace quarters caught fire, and the emperor panicked, at a complete loss as to what he should do. |
20 |
xian2lao1guan1reng3
li3:
"eng1di1
sa3
bi2kui1
la,
huan3sang2
ni2
ge4-ta1-duo3." li3-zu2
le,
a2ce1
suo1
ze2
hu3-lie3
hou2gong1
wo2tu1-bo3
la2
dong2
peng2,
mi4
se2-liao3.
General Xiang reassured him: "Your Majesty, don't be afraid, this is just a small matter." So saying, he drank three mouthfuls of tea and spat them out towards the concubines' quarters, putting out the fire. |
21 |
hou2gong1
tong2-lie3
ze2:
"mo1cai3
me2
tie2ba1
ze3-lie3
mi4
tao2." huan3di2
xi4-liao3,
ge4
mo3
yi2la1
bie4-bo3
mo3
la2xie1
duo3
ku2ru1-ta1tiu1.
From the concubines' quarters came the report that a sudden squall had put out the fire. The emperor was so frightened when he heard this that his tongue hung out of his mouth, and for a long time he was not able to draw it back. |
22 |
huan3di2
me3-lie1
xian2lao1guan1reng3
za2xi1-si3tai2
a, guo2
guo2
a3-bo3
jian1sang1
ka4-i,
huan3di2
li3:
"ni2
ta4
song1kuo1-gu2,
nga2
da4ha3
ge3
nie4
cai2
ka1-gu2!"
The emperor realised that General Xiang had amazing abilities, and wanted him to stay in the capital to help protect the nation: "Don't go back, why not stay with me and enjoy prosperity and a high position here?" |
23 |
xian2lao1guan1reng3
kuo1ba1
qi4qi3-bo3
li3:
"ni2
ge3
jing1long3bao1dian2
a,
ang2
eng1ge1
wan2bao1
ku1ca4-lie1;
se2
ge3-nie3
luo4die1
nie4
cai2
ka1-hhe1, sa3
ri1-ci1hhe1;
But General Xiang shook his head and replied: "You have a gilded palace here, we live on Wanbao [Ten Thousand Treasures] Mountain. You only know how to enjoy yourselves, but don't know how to do anything. |
24 |
ang2
eng1ge1-nie3
luo4die1
jie2ri1-xi2
ca2, qie4
ri1
duo3
heng4,
kuo1
di3
ngo4
di3
mo3
nie4ka1-bo3
cai2
xie2."
We are hard-working folk, excelling at whatever we do. We spend our days happily digging for gold and silver." |
25 |
huan3di2
guo2
a3po1li1,
guo2
ta4
ce3; huan3di2
guo2
song1kuo1-lie3
jian1sang1
a4yi3-xi2
ge4,
me3-lie1
ta4-nie3
sa3
ze2;
The emperor tried again and again to persuade him to stay, but he adamantly refused. The emperor was afraid that after he returned he would rebel and usurp the throne, and would say bad things about him. |
26 |
zu2-bo3
mo3
re2ti1ku1
lao4
lie2, re2
hu3-lie3
guo2duo3
se2.
guo2
bo3
li3:
"ni2
huo3-lie3
se2
eng1ge1-nie3
luo4die1
[hu3],
hu2ni1
da4
la2
ze2
hu3."
So as General Xiang was leaving, the emperor gave him a flagon of [poisoned] wine, which would kill him when he drank it. Moreover, he told him: "Take this wine back with you to your people and drink it together in each other's company." |
27 |
xian2lao1guan1reng3
luo4zi2,
guo2
guo2
re2
huo3-lie3
se2-xi2
ha1tai2, re2ti1ku1
huo3-bo3
[pu2meng3]
a3si3
jia1-lie3
song1kuo1-diu2.
General Xiang was a straightforward man and took the wine, never thinking for a moment that it would kill him. So clutching the flagon of wine, he rode back home on his white dragon-horse. |
28 |
yan3leng3
be2ma1du2
ye4-lie3
ze2ga3-la1-hu3, guo2
jiu1
re2
la2
ze2
hu3, kuo1ba1
ye3luo3-la1-hu3,
me3
di2-xi3tai2,
eng2qi4
luo2bu1
mie4
zu2-diu2, jiu1
meng3
ga3
ong3-bo3
mo3
se2-liao3.
When they reached Baimadu in Yuanling, he began to feel thirsty, so he drank a mouthful of wine. At once his head began to spin, his stomach became unbearably painful, and blood gushed out of from his nose and eyes. He died, still seated on his horse. |
29 |
pu2meng3
a3si3
luo4
sa3
hao4ri3,
xian2lao1guan1reng3
wo4
mo3
be1ce3cu1cu1
mo3 jing1ceng3-bo3
xi4ca3-lie3
huan3di2
da4ha3
si1lie3.
The white dragon-horse understood human nature, so with General Xiang's body on its back and tears streaming down its face, it galloped back to the capital to denounce the emperor. |
30 |
huan3di2
yi3-lie3,
guo2duo3
a1ye3
ri1-bo3-xi2
ge4
mo3
se2.
When the emperor saw them, he knew he had done wrong and was frightened to death. |
31 |
guo2
luo4se2tu1
bo3
li3:
"nga2
ni2
bo3
nie3
nie3
re1
hi2
ge1-nie3
dao2cang3
ri1-i, ang2ni1
hu2ni1
da4
ni2
bo3
jie2zu1
a3si3
die4-bo3
si2-lie3
bong3."
He addressed the corpse: "I will give you the full forty-nine days of funerary rites, and I and the entire court will dress in mourning for your burial." |
32 |
luo4se2tu1
ei1ya1
geng1ke4-ta1-zu2,
huan3di2
li3:
"nga2
ta1nie3ku3
ka4,
ni2
lang3qi1-cai3
ka4, nga2
ni2
bo3
tu1wan3
pu3sa3
lao4
po1,
hi2
hi2
hi2
hi2
long1-nie3
ci1ke1ta1
xian1
sou2, me2
da4ha3
nie3hhe2
hhe3,
lao3ci3
su3su3
da4ha3
ku1su3."
But the corpse still did not topple, so the emperor added: "Let me rule this world and you the netherworld, I will deify you as the Tuwang god, so that you may enjoy the incense offerings of countless generations; you will live for ever, as bright as the sun and moon." |
33 |
eng1-zu2,
pu2meng3
a3si3
kuo1ba1
ga4
dong2
ku2ku1-lie3 xian2lao1guan1reng3
wo4-bo3
xian1xi1-bo3
eng3zou2.
At this, the white horse bowed, and galloped back to Xiangxi bearing General Xiang's corpse. |
34 |
ta1nie1,
bi2zi1ka3
guo2
die2-bo3
mo3
tu1wan3gong1
lao4
su2-lie3, peng3gong1
jiao2zu1
tian3hao1hang2
da4ha3
gong2-bo3
jing2-la1.
Afterwards, in order to commemorate him, the Tujia people built a Tuwang temple, and worshipped him alongside Duke Peng and Hero Tian. |