
A wandering narrator, haunted by a life spent chasing the glitter of pleasure districts, recounts his own reckless youth in vivid, lyrical detail. He paints a portrait of bustling Yangzhou’s brothels, gambling dens, and the seductive allure that lured countless young men into ruin, while warning that the fleeting thrills of “wind and moon” are nothing but dreams that dissolve at dawn. Through his candid confession, the story becomes a mirror for anyone tempted by easy pleasures, urging a return to modest study and honest companionship.
The tale takes a sudden turn when the narrator, lost in the mountains, encounters two enigmatic hermits—one a celestial matchmaker condemned for stirring mortal passions, the other a scarred survivor of the very vices he describes. Their cryptic dialogue hints at deeper forces shaping love and fate, and the mysterious manuscript they hand over promises to expose the hidden costs of indulgence. Listeners are drawn into a world where history, folklore, and personal regret intertwine, offering both entertainment and a sobering moral compass.
Language
zh
Duration
~2 hours (155K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2008-10-16
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
An anonymous 19th-century Chinese novelist, this writer is best known for a vivid, cautionary tale of pleasure, illusion, and decline in Yangzhou's courtesan world. The surviving record is sparse, but the book itself has endured as a striking window into urban life and moral anxiety in late imperial China.
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