Sinking city myth
The Sinking City Myth is one of some great flood themes in Chinese folklore. This theme have these specific characteristics: one or two survivors, blood crying statue, and the whole city along with its citizens were sinking. The survivor(s) was being saved by the gods because of his/her benevolent acts; may be an old lady or a devoted son. The blood crying statue was often a stone lion statue, or sometimes tortoise statue. This theme is often confused with another flood theme which greatly increase the sunken area from a city into the whole world.[1]
Records of Searching for Spirits
Records of Searching for Spirits (Chinese: 搜神記; pinyin: Sōushénjì) is a collection of stories from the 4th century CE which was compiled by Gan Bao from East Jin Dynasty. This literature contains two versions of the legend of the sunken city, each in Chapter 13 and 20. The story from Chapter 20 tells of a benevolent old woman who is told that her city would be sunk after the eyes of the tortoise statue in her city turned red. Every day she checked its eyes, until one day a naughty child colored the eyes red. The old woman, with the help of a dragon, escaped the city just before the city sank beneath the water and become a lake.[1]
Buddhist version
Once in a dark times, most people did not believe in Buddha and the gods anymore. Ksitigarbha Bodhisattva turned himself into a beggar to find the last pious person. He found an old lady praying to the gods who gave him half of the rice which was intended for offering. The Bodhisattva told the lady that her hometown would be sunk after the lion statue's eyes in her city turned red. She passed the warning to other citizens but was laughed at. They secretly painted the statue's eyes red as a prank for the old lady, who was shocked and once again warned the citizens. The people of the city laughed at her and, realising that she could not convince them, the old woman climbed a nearby mountain. After she reached the top, she turned her head just to find her whole city had sunk under the water and wept bitterly.[2]
Nanyang (1982)
In 1982, the people from Nanyang, Henan still recall the legend of a brother and sister who frequently played with an iron lion statue in the front of a temple. One day, a monk told the older sister to give the lion a steamed bun every day and warned her to check its eyes. If the eyes turned red, she and her brother were to climb into the lion's belly. One day the sister found the statue's eyes red. She called her little brother and they both climbed into the lion's belly not long before the sky turned dark and the wind blew hard. After the sky was clear, they climbed out and found that "the sky had fallen" while everyone in the village had died. They brought with them the steamed buns from inside the lion's belly and searched for another survivors until they found an old woman on the top of the mountain. Both brother and sister asked the old woman what should they do next; the old woman advised that each of them should roll a part of a millstone from the top of the mountain. If the millstone landed on top of each other as it should be, they should marry and repopulate the world; and the result was so. They had five pair of male and female children, each pairs were married and the world is full with human beings once more.[1]
Eight Immortals
"The Eight Immortals Cross the Sea" comics by Chan Kok Sing[3] told a story about Jade Emperor who was about to punish a city by sinking it because the citizens were sinful. The Eight Immortals tried to stop the plan because there could be virtuous people among the citizens and it would be unfair if they were being drowned with the rest. To save the good people, Li Tie Guai and Han Xiang Zi came down to the city as beggars; the citizens despised them and a woman even threw a cake which was used to clean her baby's feces at them. On the next day, both immortals disguised as oil sellers sold two bottles of oil at half the price of one bottle. The citizens thought them as fools and greedily took the deal. After awhile, a young woman came back and gave the two additional money as her grandfather had told her they had undercharged. Li Tie Guai and Han Xiang Zi felt satisfied. and made a report to the Jade Emperor.
The next day, both immortals told the old man and his granddaughter that their city would be sunk after the lion statue in the city cried blood. The old man hurriedly told the other villagers, but they mocked him. He checked the statue's eyes every day until one day some of the citizens secretly painted the statue's eyes with pork's blood. The old man became terrified and once again warned the whole city but in vain. He took his granddaughter to high ground and both of them saw their city drowned by a rainstorm.[3]
Culture
- Gùshi shíshī yǎn hóng 紅眼石獅故事 ("When the Lion's Eyes Turn Red") was a drama dance by "New Tang Dynasty Performing Arts Center" (choreography by Tia Zhang) to celebrate Chinese New Year in 2006, about a benevolent old lady and Guan Yin.[4][5]
See also
References
- ^ a b c Lihui, Yang; Deming, An; Anderson, Jessica (2005). Handbook of Chinese Mythology. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-533263-6.
- ^ "When the Lion's Eyes Turn Red". Tales of Wisdom. 15 November 2009. Retrieved 15 November 2015.
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(help) - ^ a b Chan Kok Sing. The Eight Immortals Cross the Sea. Asiapac Books. ISBN 978-9812290847.
- ^ "When the Lion's Eyes Turn Red [ HD ]". Youtube. 24 September 2014. Retrieved 15 November 2015.
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ignored (help) - ^ "When the lion's eyes turn red 紅眼石獅故事". Story Kingdom. 30 July 2011. Retrieved 15 November 2015.
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