The House of the Scarlet Moon

The House of the Scarlet Moon

A Poem by David Lewis Paget
"

Another Chinese gothic.

"

I fell in love with a Chinese girl

Her name was Chen Xiao Fei,
We worked together in Middle School
In the Province of Anhui,
She'd join me in my apartment when
The working day was done,
But never would take me to home to meet
Her mother, Chen Shaojun.
 
Xiao Fei was going on thirty, which
Had meant, in Chinese terms,
That she was a spinster, on the shelf,
She had no marriage plans,
I asked her once if she'd marry me
But she laughed and said, 'No way!
My mother would jump from the balcony
If I married an old Yang Wei.'
 
I called in once to the family home
To win her mother round,
She glared at me as I paced the floor,
Her father sat and frowned,
She wouldn't sit at the table while
I stayed there, under her roof,
But screeched at her daughter, in Chinese,
Some slang that was quite uncouth.
 
She came one day to say, Xiao Fei,
The wedding date was set,
I asked her who was the lucky man -
But she'd not even met him yet!
Her mother had schemed and arranged it all
To thwart what plans we had,
She cried a bucket of silent tears
But would do as her mother said.
 
She stayed away for a month or two
To let things settle down,
Then married the man that her mother chose
From a village, out of town.
When a month had passed, I was feeling lost
'Til there came a knock at my door,
It was Chen Xiao Fei in some deep dismay
So I sat with her, down on the floor.
 
She clung on tight to my shoulder, sobbed,
And cried, wouldn't let me go,
The man she'd married was such a brute
As the marks and the bruises showed,
But worse than that, she looked at me
As her eyes had begun to mist,
'I'm having a child, and I don't quite know
If the baby's yours, or his!'
 
I sat quite shocked in the evening gloom,
And I felt a sudden chill,
'You'll know as soon as the baby's born,'
I said, but my heart stood still.
If she should deliver a foreign child
She'd be left in a deep disgrace,
And her family then would turn their backs
From the horror of 'losing face'.
 
Our fears were proven a few months on,
The child was a baby boy,
At first the father and parents danced,
They couldn't conceal their joy,
In China, there is the one child rule,
One chance is all that you get,
So girls go missing there all the time
If the father's mind is set.
 
For sons are valued as girls are not,
A boy can work on the farm,
A girl will grow to be someone's wife,
Will travel away from home.
So often, just when the child is born
The father will wait outside,
The judge and the executioner,
It's often a question of pride.
 
A boy is swept up in loving arms,
A girl will wait on the thumb,
If the thumb goes down then the baby drowns
Or is dumped in the cinder drum.
If a boy is born with a fatal flaw,
His fate is the same as hers,
Or he may be sold to a heartless soul,
They call it the Chinese Curse.
 
The boy was fine 'til he opened his eyes
And they saw that his eyes were blue,
His skin was yellow, his hair was black
But the eyes... the eyes... They knew!
Not even a day had passed before
The baby had paid for our sin,
He was sold to a beggar for ten yuan,
A beggar named Sun Lang Lin.
 
The birth, already forgotten there
Was marked - 'delivered but dead!'
The Doctor was paid a forgetting fee,
As Xiao Fei cried in her bed,
She told me, when she returned to work,
What they'd done with our beautiful son,
She looked aside, avoided my eyes,
Pretended they'd done nothing wrong.
 
It took me a month to discover the name
Of the beggar, Sun Lang Lin,
I haunted the areas beggars haunt,
But could find no sign of him,
Then just by chance, a crippled child
Who begged by a streetside bin,
Cowered away when I asked her the way
To the beggar called Sun Lang Lin.
 
She raised a hand to protect herself
At the sound of his hated name,
She said that he'd kicked and he'd beaten her
Had crippled and brought her to shame,
This child was one of a dozen he had
Who begged for him, night to noon,
She whispered his place of ill-fame in my ear,
'The House of the Scarlet Moon'.
 
I couldn't find anyone willing to talk about
Where this old Tavern was,
I knew it was out in the countryside,
Beside a deserted Mosque.
I travelled by day and I slept rough at night
As I searched in the dusk and the gloom,
Then finally, there in the distance I spied
The House of the Scarlet Moon.
 
Sun Lang Lin lay in his dirty rags
On a bed on the floor at the back,
I waited 'til midnight, picked up a rock
And I worked out my plan of attack,
Children were crying in fitful sleep
In a room in that dark old den,
I crept through the dark to the crying there
To look for my blue-eyed son.
 
Around the walls were earthenware jars
And each with a child within,
He'd jammed them in tight, where nothing could grow,
Their legs would be twisted and thin,
This house of horrors and nightmares kept
Its secrets all wrapped in gloom,
My son lay there on a coverlet,
In the House of the Scarlet Moon.
 
I seized my son, I smashed the jars,
The children fell to the floor,
They each were maimed and deformed, I knew,
They'd never be able to walk,
They'd spend their lives in the gutters for him,
Set up with a begging bowl,
I wondered how people like Sun Lang Lin
Could open the doors to the soul.
 
He woke, came running right into the room,
And he pulled out a long, sharp knife,
I laid my son on the coverlet
And prepared to fight for my life,
He lunged just once, I stepped aside,
I hit him just once with the rock,
He fell and he didn't get up again
So I picked up my son, and took off.
 
Once well away in the undergrowth
I stopped and I turned, to see,
A flame was flickering through the roof
Of the Tavern that used to be.
It all went up with a mighty roar
As I hugged my son in the gloom,
There's no more babies, or cripples made
At the House of the Scarlet Moon.
 
David Lewis Paget

© 2012 David Lewis Paget


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Featured Review

David, this is really a beautifully written poem. I loved the way you describe the ways of the Chinese. It is true that fixed marriages are still on in their culture and how they treated the boys from the girls differently. I just wish that Scarlet Moon is not real. If it is, it is a sad place to be for children. It is as if an early death sentence for the innocent. Sad and intriguing story.

Keep on writing, my friend. :)

Posted 15 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.




Reviews

What a story! Mixing in several themes and social injustice in China. Comfortable write for an uncomfortable topic.

Posted 12 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

But never would take me to home to meet
Her mother, Chen Shaojun.____________she knew, she doesn't want serious live. -We do so, we women.
spinster - my gosh. Thanks for giving me this word. How bad. This poem makes me feel deep.
"She cried a bucket of silent tears
" ---------this I loved. What a brilliance in a line.
"For sons are valued as girls are not," -----so true, there. I believe everything you wrote.... The family regulates what the society is not.

AMAZING AND VALUABLE WHEN LOOKING AT A SEGMENT NOBODY HAS WRITTEN HERE WHO KNOWS ABOUT CHINA LIKE YOU DO??? BE WITH ME SOON
REGARDS




Posted 15 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Wow. Powerful, sad, struck terror to my soul. Only humans can be so inhumane. Tragic story of a culture that we have a hard time contemplating.

Posted 15 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

David, this is really a beautifully written poem. I loved the way you describe the ways of the Chinese. It is true that fixed marriages are still on in their culture and how they treated the boys from the girls differently. I just wish that Scarlet Moon is not real. If it is, it is a sad place to be for children. It is as if an early death sentence for the innocent. Sad and intriguing story.

Keep on writing, my friend. :)

Posted 15 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

David, you never fail to bring emotions into your writings, whether it be laughter, or tears or any number of other emotions. This brought tears as I know that there are a lot of truths spoken. It is a sad thing indeed when children are used in these ways but it is so often the case.
You achive the dream of every writer, to cause readers to feel what you are writing about. You have a way of involving the reader that insures the story will be long remembered.
You are indeed a Master of your craft.

Posted 16 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

This is a sad story, but as usual well crafted. Your talent and imgination never ceases to amaze me.

Posted 16 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

David this breaks my heart. I know that this is not very far from fact as well. The writing leaves me speechless....and carried away in thought. Just last week I was thinking that perhaps when I finished my English degree I might consider going to China to teach children to read. My son would be in college himself then...and well you know a little about my relationship. But this is horrific. Where is the humanity? I have heard many times before similar tales in Russia and Mongolia, China as well. You are a magnificent writer...you fully captured me with this.
Todd

Posted 16 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

david, I know a large part of the CHINESE LAW of one child per couple is true..I just pray the unwanted aren't disposed of like you wrote..You living in China must have worn of on you a bit as your usage of their names is amazing..You remember things so well..I wish seizaures had not destroyed my memory..Another great write..God bless and hi to your Mrs. Valentine

Posted 16 Years Ago


1 of 2 people found this review constructive.

I'm always overjoyed when I see that you've posted something new. You never fail to please, to enthrall, and enchant.

My favorite lines in this poem are:

"The boy was fine 'til he opened his eyes
And they saw that his eyes were blue,
His skin was yellow, his hair was black
But the eyes... the eyes... They knew!"

This is that single, solitary, breathless moment when the reader hangs on the precipice, awaiting the answer that can only be.

You are a phenomenal storyteller; and I love, love, love reading your work.

Linda Marie Van Tassell


Posted 16 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

What a sad, tragic and poignant story. There is a lot of truths here about Chinese culture (from what I understand). I'm glad the narrator got his son.

Whew! What a ride that one was! :)

Posted 16 Years Ago


1 of 2 people found this review constructive.


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459 Views
11 Reviews
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Added on December 2, 2008
Last Updated on June 27, 2012
Tags: Chinese, anhui, balcony, yang wei

Author

David Lewis Paget
David Lewis Paget

Moonta, South Australia, Australia



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