Throughout the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368), the
Southern Drama continued to develop, while absorbing elements from Zaju.
As a result, the Southern Drama made a great leap forward in sophistication.
The Story of the Hairpin, The Story of
the White Rabbit, The Two Moon Prayers, The Story of the Pipa and The Story of
Killing the Dog are the five most representative of
the dramas popular at the end of the Yuan Dynasty. It is a great pity that the
names of their authors are unknown.
The Story of the
Hairpin is a historical account of how Qian Yulian,
a prostitute, marries Wang Shipeng. After Wang successfully passes in the
imperial examination, he abandons her. Qian Yulian then throws herself into a
river and drowns. However, the drama tells a totally different story of how a
couple is loyal to each other, and Wang Shipeng is a positive character. This
complicated story has as its theme the loyalty of a man to the wife of his
poverty-stricken days after he becomes a high-ranking official. It criticizes a
very common phenomenon in feudal society, by which men who became successful
abandoned the wives they married when they were poor. This drama was very
popular among the ordinary people of the time, as it sings the praises of true
love and loyalty, and despises the treachery of rich and high-ranking
officials.
The Story of the White
Rabbit is about Liu Zhiyuan, a historical figure
born into a family which had been reduced to poverty. Starting out as a humble
soldier, he wins promotion right up to the rank of general, and finally becomes
Emperor Gaozu of the Later Han Dynasty during the Five Dynasties Period
(947-950). Meanwhile, Li Sanniang, gives birth to a boy and sends him to join
the army when he gets older. One day, Yaoqilang goes hunting, and chases a white
rabbit, which leads to the family being united once more. The drama also lauds
Li Sanniang, who did not judge people by their wealth, and married Liu Zhiyuan,
a poor man. The most touching aspect of the drama lies in Li Sanniang's
sufferings: She "carried water 3,000 times a day, and milled grain all night".
The Two Moon
Prayers portrays the turmoil and chaos of war, and
tells how people were uprooted from their homes and forced to wander destitute.
The leading male and female characters meet as they flee from war. They go
through thick and thin together and finally fall in love. Without the permission
of their parents or an introduction by a go-between, they marry amidst the
flames of war, contrary to feudal mores. The tension in this drama stems from
the contrast between the love between the two people and the grim situation of
war.
The Story of Killing the
Dog tells how Sun Hua, jealous of his younger
brother, reduces him to the condition of a beggar. Sun Hua's wife, who feels
sorry for her brother-in-law, has a dog killed and disguised as a corpse. She
then places the "corpse" in front of the house. Sun Hua is terrified and asks
his worthless cronies to help him move the "corpse", but they all refuse. Only
his younger brother generously offers to get rid of it; so that suspicion should
not fall on Sun Hua, his younger brother claims to be the murderer. In the end,
the brothers are reconciled, and are praised by the local magistrate. This drama
warns against falling in with bad companions and failing to tell the good from
the evil.
The Story of the Pipa
is a folk tale extant in the
Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279) about how Cai Bojie betrays his parents and
wife, and is killed by a thunderbolt. Based on this story, Gao Ming, wrote a
play which has a happy ending. In The Story of the Pipa, Cai Bojie is an
honest scholar who is devoted to his parents and wife, and has no desire for
riches or fame. His father, however, insists that he go to the capital to sit
for the imperial examination. When he passes with the highest honors the prime
minister forces him to marry his daughter, and the emperor refuses to allow him
to leave his post and go home. Meanwhile, a severe drought strikes his native
region, and his parents starve to death. Cai's wife, Zhao Wuniang, begs her way
to the capital, and at last finds her husband. Cai Bojie and his two wives
observe a three-year period of mourning for his deceased parents, and they win
acclaim from the emperor and people for their filial devotion. The message of
the play is that the pursuit of wealth and rank tore families apart in feudal
times. Cai Bojie unwittingly falls into the trap that lies in wait for the
successful, while Zhao Wuniang loyally supports her parents-in-law despite
grueling hardships. In the drama, high-ranking officials are arrogant and
domineering, enjoying lives of luxury and extravagance; at the same time, the
countryside is a scene of desolation. This vividly shows the profound
contradictions in the old society.