WSMTATMC C90
by berryChapter 90
Upon arriving at the prefectural academy, Chen Qingyan and Chen Qingsong were stunned once more.
Laizhou Prefectural Academy was even larger than Jizhouâs.
Just inside the gate stood a massive carved stone screen etched with Confucius and Mencius; beside it was the founding deanâs inscription: âEven deadwood at springâs return may flourish again; but man has no second youth to live anew.â The vigorous brushwork sent a shiver through the reader.
Circling behind the screen lay a broad flagstone path lined with neatly pruned ornamental trees, thick with summer shade.
It was not yet class time; here and there, groups of students sat in discussion, the air dense with learning.
Because notice had been given in advance, the carriage rolled straight into the academy and, with practiced ease, arrived before the deanâs offices.
The dean, Fang Yunxiao, was a man in his early fortiesâshort, slightly stout, clad in a dark blue scholarâs robe and cap, with a neat short beard and a kindly face.
Seeing Liang Boqing arrive, he went forward warmly. âI must trouble the venerable Master Liang to come in person.â
Liang, for once, smiled and patted his arm. âI was passing by to see youâmany years gone. How do you fare?â
âAs ever. These three must be the beloved disciples you mentioned.â
The three bowed. âGreetings, Dean.â
âNo need for formalityâcome in and sit so we can talk at leisure.â
Tea had already been set out. A young student served, pouring and replenishing cups for the two elders.
The three stood respectfully by Master Liangâs side as the two men spoke.
âWe parted three years ago,â Fang said. âMy teacher told me you were bound for Lord Chenâs hometown. I was worried then, but now I see you have taken two fine pupils.â
âThree blocks of elm-wood,â Liang waved it off. âThey must be pared and shaped before theyâll make timber.â
Fang, an old acquaintance of Chen Jing, naturally recognized Qinghuai. He studied him briefly. âSo grown already. The last time I saw you, you were but a childânow a young gentleman. Your fatherâs transfer to Shanzhouâhe is well?â
âMy father is well.â
âGood. Heâs been too busy for correspondence; with mountains high and waters long, who knows when there will be time to meet again.â
Fang turned to Qingyan and Qingsong. âAnd these two? Also of the Chen clan, it seemsâone can see it from their features alone.â
Liang stroked his beard. âYes. The elder is Chen Qingyan, the younger Chen Qingsongâboth nephews of Chen Jing.â
âGoodâthree brothers of one heart. Study diligently, and when you enter service, youâll find mutual support at court.â
The three bowed assent.
âJingqi,â Fang said to the young attendant, âtake them to the dormitory. Let them join Class C for a few days to get used to the routine; weâll place them by the monthly exam results.â
âYes.â
When the boys had gone, Liang said quietly, âYesterday, I went to see Elder Cai. He⊠he did not recognize meâŠâ
Fang sighed deeply. âNot only youâhe no longer knows me or Cai Yun.â
âHow could it have worsened so much? When I left, it wasnât like this. Have physicians examined him?â
âMany, to no avail. We can only tend him as best we can.â
Elder Caiâs illness was what the modern world would call Alzheimerâsâwithout remedy even in the twenty-first century, much less in antiquity.
âIn the past few years, he began with forgetfulness but still knew faces. Since the start of this year, he recognizes no one, and his temper has grown childlike. He must not be left aloneâlest he wander off.â
Liang dabbed his eyes. âTo suffer such an illness, and Cai Yun bears the burden with him. Even his own hair is half white already.â
Elder Cai had four sons; Cai Yun, the eldest, tended him at home. The other three were posted afar and could not return with ease.
By midday, Fang proposed they dine together.
âIâll forgo the meal and not detain you further,â Liang said. âWeâll be here more than two months. When you have leisure, weâll meet.â
Fang escorted him to the carriage. âIf you have a free hour, please visit my teacher often⊠perhaps it will stir an old memory.â
âI surely will. And I leave those three children in your care.â
âRest assured. I will look after them well.â
He watched Liang depart before returning to his duties.
Meanwhile, Cai Jingqi led the three toward the student quarters.
He was Elder Caiâs grandson, sixteen years old and already a provincial student (bingsheng), preparing for next yearâs provincial exam.
Because Liang and his grandfather were dear friends, Qinghuai had often visited as a childâthus, they were old acquaintances.
Open and talkative by nature, Jingqi struck up conversation. âDo you remember me, Qinghuai? Once your teacher brought you to our house, and we quarreled over a gourd.â
Qinghuai couldnât help laughing. âHow could I forget.â
Theyâd been eight or nineâat the most mischievous age. Visiting the house, theyâd seen gourds drying on a frame in the courtyard. Elder Cai had sent servants to pick some; Cai Jingqi had arrived and forbid them to cut any; the quarrel escalated until they were both wailing.
In the end, Liang compromisedâone gourd each.
They laughed, and the old familiarity returned.
Jingqi brought them to the dormitory. âHere is your room. Your uncle wrote ahead to have the tutors place you togetherâso you can look after one another.â
âThank you.â
âNo thanks needed. Stow your luggage, and Iâll show you around.â
The room was not large: four plank beds, with one berth empty aside from the three brothers. Opposite stood a row of wooden lockers for personal items and books. Near the window was a table with several chairs for reading and copying.
Jingqi handed over the key. âLock the door when you go out. With many people in the academy, hands may be light. Keep valuables put away so no one rummages them.â
Qingyan accepted the key with a nod.
âNext, weâll go collect student uniformsâwhat Iâm wearing. During lessons, the uniform is mandatory; slovenly dress earns penalties.â
Qingsong asked anxiously, âWhat kind of penalties?â
âOh, fetching water, sweeping courtyards, cleaning the latrinesâsuch things.â
Hearing the penalties werenât severe, the three relaxed a little.
With luggage set and the room locked, they followed Jingqi through the bathhouse, the privies, and the classrooms in turn.
He explained each rule patiently, helping them integrate quickly into academy life.
Near noon, the four went to the refectory.
Much like Jizhouâs, the hall was large with benches and tables. Students queued with bowls and chopsticks for their meals.
The fare, however, differed by region. Laizhou was by the sea; with a thriving fishery, fish was cheaper than porkâthus, nearly every meal included fish.
At first, Qingyan and Qingsong were delightedâuntil a month of steamed fish, boiled fish, braised fish, fried fish left them ready to flee at the sight.
Over lunch, Jingqi ran into good friends and brought them to make introductions.
âThis is Sun Yan, that is Pang Heming, and here is Zhao Lanâall classmates and friends.â He then introduced the brothers: âThese three are visiting from Jizhouâand disciples of Master Liang: Chen Qingyan, Chen Qinghuai, and Chen Qingsong.â
At the mention of Liangâs name, their eyes lit up. In Laizhou, the masterâs renown exceeded even Jizhouâs; many had once sought to be admitted to his tutelage.
But regardless of brillianceâor pitiful pleas at his gateâhe had refused all.
People had said he kept a single closed-door disciple who was the prefectâs son; now there were two more.
âHas Master Liang begun to accept students?â Pang whispered.
âI donât know,â Jingqi said. âAsk them.â
âMaster is old,â Qinghuai replied quietly. âHe says he will take no more pupils.â
The group sighed in regretâand grew more curious about the Chen brothers. They sat together, eating and talking.
Of the three, Zhao Lan was oldestâtwenty-one, with wife and two childrenâclosest to Qingyan in age, and thus they had more to discuss.
The othersâsixteen or seventeenânot yet marriedâwhile Qingsong was youngest. He spoke little, but their talk amused him.
They four were in the same class. The academy had five: A (jia), B (yi), C (bing), D (ding), and E (wu).
These were not fixed; assignments shifted monthly by rank. Class A held a fixed forty seats with last-place elimination in monthly exams.
If a B-class student outscored someone in A, he rose to A; conversely, Aâs stragglers were demoted to B.
A and B enjoyed stipendsâstudy with pay. Competition was fierce and pressure high.
C and D were less intenseâno headcount limit. Any xiucai could enter if he paid; but those who performed too poorly might be persuaded to leave.
E-class consisted largely of military-track studentsâriding and archery foremost; academic courses were secondary and separate from the first four classes.
After lunch, Jingqi guided them through Class C.
It held nearly sixty students, mostly xiucai from Laizhouâs various counties, ages ranging from thirteen or fourteen to thirty or forty.
âEach day, morning reading begins at the third quarter of the Yin hour. Tardiness earns punishment. Our tutor is strictâlatecomers must stand outside and listen; C-class tutors have tempers.â
âOhâand apart from regular lessons, you must choose two of the Six Arts every ten-day cycle: rites, music, archery, charioteering, calligraphy, arithmetic. Choose in advanceâor the tutor will assign at random. Last time, someone ended up in charioteering and fell from the carriageâbroke a leg.â
The three shuddered as one. âThank you for the warning, Brother Qi!â
âCall me Jingqi. If thereâs nothing else, Iâll take my leave.â
âYouâve troubled yourself.â
âNot at allâwe are classmates now. If anything confuses you, come find me in Class A.â
After seeing him off, the brothers hurried back to the dorm to rest and prepare for their first day of lessons.
Footnotes:
âBingshengâ (çŠç) â A provincial-level student status, typically indicating advancement beyond the basic licentiate in some regional academies.
âSix Artsâ (瀌ăäčăć°ăćŸĄăäčŠăæ°) â The canonical curriculum in classical education: rites, music, archery, charioteering, calligraphy, and mathematics.