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¡¡¡¡¡°May every happiness be yours£¬ sir. My young lady£¬ Miss King£¬ whose humble dwelling is the adjoining house£¬ seeing that you are living in solitude£¬ has sent me with this fruit and tea as a complimentary offering.¡±

¡¡¡¡So saying£¬ she presented to Jasmine the box£¬ which contained pears and a packet of scented tea.

¡¡¡¡¡°To what am I indebted for this honour£¿¡± replied Jasmine£» ¡°I can claim no relationship with your lady£¬ nor have I the honour of her acquaintance.¡±

¡¡¡¡¡°My young lady says£¬¡± answered the waiting-woman£¬ ¡°that£¬ among the myriads who come to this inn and the thousands who go from it£¬ she has seen no one to equal your Excellency in form and feature. At sight of you she was confident that you came from a lofty and noble family£¬ and having learned from your attendants that you are the son of a colonel£¬ she ventured to send you these trifles to supplement the needy fare of this rude inn.¡±

¡¡¡¡¡°Tell me something about your young lady£¬¡± said Jasmine£¬ in a moment of idle curiosity.

¡¡¡¡¡°My young lady£¬¡± said the woman£¬ ¡°is the daughter of Mr. King£¬ who was a vice-president of a lower court. Her father and mother having both visited the 'Yellow Springs' [Hades]£¬ she is now living with an aunt£¬ who has been blessed by the God of Wealth£¬ and whose main object in life is to find a husband whom her niece may be willing to marry. The young gentleman£¬ my young lady's cousin£¬ is one of the richest men in Ch'engtu. All the larger inns belong to him£¬ and his profits are as boundless as the four seas. He is as anxious as his mother to find a suitable match for the young lady£¬ and has promised that so soon as she can make a choice he will arrange the wedding.¡±

¡¡¡¡¡°I should have thought£¬¡± said Jasmine£¬ ¡°that£¬ being the owner of so much wealth and beauty£¬ the young lady would have been besieged by suitors from all parts of the empire.¡±

¡¡¡¡¡°So she is£¬¡± said the woman£¬ ¡°and from her window yonder she espies them£¬ for they all put up at this inn. Hitherto she has made fun of them all£¬ and describes their appearance and habits in the most amusing way. 'See this one£¬' says she£¬ 'with his bachelor cap on and his new official clothes and awkward gait£¬ looking for all the world like a barn-door fowl dressed up as a stork£» or that one£¬ with his round shoulders£¬ monkey-face£¬ and crooked legs£»' and so she tells them off.¡±

¡¡¡¡¡°What does she say of me£¬ I wonder£¿¡± said Jasmine£¬ amused.

¡¡¡¡¡°Of your Excellency she says that her comparisons fail her£¬ and that she can only hope that the Fates who guided your jewelled chariot hitherward will not tantalise her by an empty vision£¬ but will bind your ankles to hers with the red matrimonial cords.¡±

¡¡¡¡¡°How can I hope for such happiness£¿¡± said Jasmine£¬ smiling. ¡°But please to tell your young lady that£¬ being only a guest at this inn£¬ I have nothing worthy of her acceptance to offer in return for her bounteous gifts£¬ and that I can only assure her of my boundless gratitude.¡±

¡¡¡¡With many bows£¬ and with reiterated wishes for Jasmine's happiness and endless longevity£¬ the woman took her leave.

¡¡¡¡¡°Truly this young lady has formed a most perverted attachment£¬¡± said Jasmine to herself. ¡°She reminds me of the man in the fairy tale who fell in love with a shadow£¬ and£¬ so far as I can see£¬ she is not likely to get any more satisfaction out of it than he did.¡± So saying£¬ she took up a pencil and scribbled the following lines on a scrap of paper£º

¡¡¡¡¡°With thoughts as ardent as a quenchless thirst£¬She sends me fragrant and most luscious fruit£»Without a blush she seeks a phenix guest [a bachelor] Who dwells alone like case-enveloped lute.¡±

¡¡¡¡After this mental effort Jasmine went to bed. Nor had her interview with the waiting-woman made a sufficient impression on her mind to interfere in any way with her sleep. She was surprised£¬ however£¬ on coming into her sitting-room in the morning£¬ to meet the same messenger£¬ who£¬ laden with a dish of hot eggs and a brew of tea£¬ begged Jasmine to ¡°deign to look down upon her offerings.¡±

¡¡¡¡¡°Many thanks£¬¡± said Jasmine£¬ ¡°for your kind attention.¡±

¡¡¡¡¡°You are putting the saddle on the wrong horse£¬¡± replied the woman. ¡°In bringing you these I am but obeying the orders of Miss King£¬ who herself made the tea of leaves from Pu-erh in Yunnan£¬ and who with her own fair hands shelled the eggs.¡±

¡¡¡¡¡°Your young lady£¬¡± answered Jasmine£¬ ¡°is as bountiful as she is kind. What return can I make her for her kindness to a stranger£¿ Stay£¬¡± she said£¬ as the thought crossed her mind that the verses she had written the night before might prove a wholesome tonic for this effusive young lady£¬ ¡°I have a few verses which I will venture to ask her to accept.¡± So saying£¬ she took a piece of peach-blossom paper£¬ on which she carefully copied the quatrain and handed it to the woman. ¡°May I trouble you£¬¡± said she£¬ ¡°to take this to your mistress£¿¡±

¡¡¡¡¡°If£¬¡± said Jasmine to herself as the woman took her departure£¬ ¡°Miss King is able to penetrate the meaning of my verses£¬ she won't like them. Without saying so in so many words£¬ I have told her with sufficient plainness that I will have nothing to say to her. But stupidity is a shield sent by Providence to protect the greater part of mankind from many evils£» so perhaps she will escape.¡±

¡¡¡¡It certainly in this case served to shield Miss King from Jasmine's shafts. She was delighted at receiving the verses£¬ and at once sat down to compose a quatrain to match Jasmine's in reply. With infinite labour she elaborated the following£º

¡¡¡¡¡°Sung Yuh on th' eastern wall sat deep in thought£¬And longed with P'e to pluck the fragrant fruit. If all the well-known tunes be newly set£¬What use to take again the half-burnt lute£¿¡±

¡¡¡¡Having copied these on a piece of silk-woven paper£¬ she sent them to Jasmine by her faithful attendant. On looking over the paper£¬ Jasmine said£¬ smiling£¬ ¡°What a clever young lady your mistress must be£¡ These lines£¬ though somewhat inconsequential£¬ are incomparable.¡±

¡¡¡¡But£¬ though Jasmine was partly inclined to treat the matter as a joke£¬ she saw that there was a serious side to the affair£¬ more especially as the colours under which she was sailing were so undeniably false. She knew well that for Sung Yuh should be read Miss King£¬ and for P'e her own name£» and she determined£¬ therefore£¬ to put an end to the philandering of Miss King£¬ which£¬ in her present state of mind£¬ was doubly annoying to her.

¡¡¡¡¡°I am deeply indebted to your young lady£¬¡± she said£¬ and then£¬ being determined to make a plunge into the morass of untruthfulness£¬ for a good end as she believed£¬ added£¬ ¡°and£¬ if I had love at my disposal£¬ I should possibly venture to make advances toward the feathery peach [a nuptial emblem]£» but let me confess to you that I have already taken to myself a wife. Had I the felicity of meeting Miss King before I committed myself in another direction£¬ I might perhaps have been a happier man. But£¬ after all£¬ if this were so£¬ my position is no worse than that of most other married men£¬ for I never met one who was not occasionally inclined to cry£¬ like the boys at 'toss cash£¬' 'Hark back and try again.' ¡±

¡¡¡¡¡°This will be sad news for my lady£¬ for she has set her heart upon you ever since you first came to the inn£» and when young misses take that sort of fancy and lose the objects of their love£¬ they are as bad as children when forbidden their sugar-plums. But what's the use of talking to you about a young lady's feelings£¡¡± said the woman£¬ with a vexed toss of her head£» ¡°I never knew a man who understood a woman yet.¡±

¡¡¡¡¡°I am extremely sorry for Miss King£¬¡± said Jasmine£¬ trying to suppress a smile. ¡°As you wisely remark£¬ a young lady is a sealed book to me£¬ but I have always been told that their fancies are as variable as the shadow of the bamboo£» and probably£¬ therefore£¬ though Miss King's sky may be overcast just now£¬ the gloom will only make her enjoy to-morrow's sunshine all the more.¡±

¡¡¡¡The woman£¬ who was evidently in a hurry to convey the news to her mistress£¬ returned no answer to this last sally£¬ but£¬ with curtailed obeisance£¬ took her departure.

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