Authors: Cao Xueqin
Tan-chun nodded in agreement and praised the aptness of the quotation. She turned to the register once more and pointed out a few more names for the other two to consider. Patience fetched a brush and inkstone for her to write with.
âMamma Zhu is a very reliable body,' said the others of one of these. âHer old man used to be a bamboo specialist and her son still is; it's in the family. She's the one we should put in charge of all the bamboos in the Garden. And Mamma Tian comes from a farming family. The farm at Sweet-rice Village may be only a plaything and not meant for serious cultivation, but if she were in charge of all those vegetable and paddy strips and doing the things that needed doing at the proper times, we should probably get a lot more out of it.'
âWhen you think of the amount of land that goes with them, it seems a pity that All-spice Court and Green Delights don't produce anything marketable,' said Tan-chun.
âOh, but they do!' said Li Wan. âEspecially All-spice Court. Half the aromatics sold in perfumers' shops and on the herb stalls at markets and temple fairs come from plants like the ones grown in All-spice. I wouldn't be surprised if there were more profit to be had out of them than out of anything else that this Garden produces. And as for Green Delights: to mention nothing else, just look at all the flowers produced by that
rosa rugosa
during the spring and summer months! And all the rambler roses and monthly roses and
rosa glabra
and honeysuckle and wistaria on the pergolas: think how much you could make out of them if the flowers were dried properly and sold to tea-merchants for flavouring!'
Tan-chun nodded enthusiastically.
âBut,' she reflected, âwe haven't got anyone who knows the art of flower-drying, have we?'
âThe mother of Miss Bao's maid Oriole knows all about that sort of thing,' said Patience. âDon't you remember her drying a lot of flowers once and filling little baskets and gourds with them to make us presents?'
âIs this the thanks I get for praising you?' Bao-chai asked Patience.
âWhat
can
you mean?' said the others, in some surprise.
âYou can't possibly give the job to her,' said Bao-chai. âYou have so many able and willing women of your own who won't be getting any of these jobs: they are going to think very poorly of me if they know that I am responsible for bringing in an outsider. I can think of someone that you
could
give this job to, though: Old Mamma Ye at Green Delights â Tealeaf's mother. She's a very honest old woman; and what's more, she is on very good terms with Oriole's mother. You'd much better give the job to her. She will probably consult Oriole's mother whenever there is anything she is not sure about in any case. She may even elect to hand over to her altogether. But that would be entirely a private matter between the two of them. The other servants might resent it, but at least they couldn't blame
us
. The advantage of this arrangement is that it would
look
fair as well as being effective.'
Li Wan and Patience agreed. Tan-chun was more sceptical:
âThat may be; but what if cupidity proves stronger than friendship?'
âNot likely in this case,' said Patience. âOnly the other day Mamma Ye was invited to become Oriole's godmother. The three of them had a little party to celebrate. The two families are very close.'
Tan-chun dropped her objection and proceeded, with the others, to deliberate on the rest of their choices â all of them women whom the four of them had mentally noted in the past for their dependability. As each one's selection was confirmed, she made a little circle with her writing-brush against the corresponding name in the register.
Shortly after this the women arrived back again to report that the doctor had gone and to hand in the prescription he had left. After studying it, Li Wan, Tan-chun and Bao-chai sent one of the women to obtain the drugs from outside and to supervise the making-up and administering of the medicine. Then Li Wan and Tan-chun told the women which of them were to have the cultivation of which parts of the Garden and what the conditions of their tenure were to be:
âYou will be expected to give us, in due season, a fixed amount of your crops for our own use; but apart from that it will be up to you to make whatever profit from them you can.
Accounts will be submitted and dues paid at the end of the year.'
âI've been having second thoughts about that,' said Tan-chun. âIf you are submitting annual accounts and paying dues, presumably it will be to the Office. But that means another lot of people with control over you and another layer skimmed off your profits. Now in thinking up this new arrangement and appointing you ourselves, we are already in a sense going above their heads, which is sure to anger them. They probably won't dare to say anything about it now, but there will be nothing to stop them getting their own back later on when you go round to settle accounts with them at the end of the year. And there's another thing. If
they
are going to be in on this, they are sure to expect a share of the produce. Whatever you agree to give us in the course of each year, they will expect the equivalent of half the amount for themselves. That's an old, established rule. Everyone knows that. But since the new arrangement is
our
creation,
I
say let's keep it out of their hands altogether. If there's to be an annual settling of accounts, let it be done here, internally.'
âIf you ask me,' said Bao-chai, âI don't think there should be any settling of accounts at all. You'd always be finding that this one had too much and that one too little. It would only be a lot of extra trouble. Why not get each of them to take over some regular item of your expenditure and pay for it out of their profits? That will keep it all inside the Garden. I've just been running over in my mind what your regular expenses are. They aren't very many. There's hair-oil, cosmetics, incense, paper: every mistress and her maids get a fixed amount of those every month. Then there are brushes, dust-pans, feather-dusters and food for the livestock (birds, rabbits, deer and so forth). That's really all. Now suppose instead of drawing money from Accounts for all those things we gave these women the responsibility of paying for them: how much do you reckon the saving would be?'
âThey're small items in themselves,' said Patience, âbut I should think if you added them all together the total annual saving would be well over four hundred taels.'
âThere you are!' said Bao-chai. âFour hundred a year, eight
hundred in two years: you could buy a small house for letting with that or add half an acre of poor farm-land to your land-holdings. But though there should be quite a lot left over after they have covered the expenses we are assigning to them, we want them to have a little something to spend on themselves after working hard all through the year; and though, from our point of view, the main object of these operations is economy, we don't want to overdo it. There would be no point in saving an extra two or three hundred taels if it meant resorting to undignified methods in order to do so. What we are now proposing means that Accounts will be paying out four or five hundred taels a year less than they do now without anyone outside feeling the pinch. And as for inside, the women doing these jobs will be getting a little extra for themselves, the ones not doing them will be able to relax a bit, the Garden's stock of trees and flowers will thrive and increase through being better cared for, and
we
shall be better off when we have this regular supply of the produce for our own use â all this without any loss of dignity. Whereas if we went all out to economize with no other consideration but making money in mind, no doubt we should have little difficulty in squeezing more out, but the effect of paying everything back into the common account would be wails of protest from everyone, both inside the Garden and out, and a consequent loss of dignity that in a household like yours would be quite unacceptable.
âAltogether there must be several dozen old women working in this Garden. If you give the money-making jobs to these few here and leave the others out in the cold, the others are going to complain that it isn't fair. Now as I said, there's still going to be quite a lot of money left over when they've finished paying these various expenses for you, and I think we should be letting them off a bit too lightly if we let them keep
all
of it. Why don't we say that every year, no matter how much or how little they have made, they are to pay so many strings of cash into a common pool which will be shared out among all the other women? Although those others won't any longer have anything to do with the upkeep of the Garden, they are responsible, day and night, for keeping an eye on the
other servants; they have the responsibility of opening and closing the gates, which means that they have to get up earlier and go to bed later than everyone else; and whenever any of us go out, whatever the weather, even if it is raining or snowing heavily, they have to carry sedans, punt boats, draw sledges â in fact do any heavy work that needs to be done. Since they work so hard in the Garden from one year's end to the next, it seems only fair that if any money is going to be made out of the Garden,
they
should have a share in it. And there's another reason for this, if it doesn't seem too petty-minded to mention it' â Bao-chai turned to the women to explain â âIf you think only of how much you can make out of this for yourselves and don't let the others have a share, they are sure to feel resentful even if they don't like to say anything and will try to make up for it by misappropriating what they can for their own use â filching a fruit here and a flower there whenever they have the opportunity. Whereas if they know in advance that they are going to get a share of whatever you make from your produce, they will be as anxious as you are that none of it is stolen and will even keep an eye on it for you when you aren't able to watch over it yourselves.'
The women were quick to see the force of this argument â no control by the Office, no settling of accounts with Xi-feng, only a few strings of cash to pay out every year. They were all of them delighted and accepted these conditions unanimously.
âBetter than being pushed around by Accounts,' they said. âIf we were paying
them
anything, they'd want a dash on top of it for themselves.'
Those of the women present who were
not
getting one of the gardening jobs, when they heard that they were going to be given money at the end of every year without having to do anything to earn it, were, if anything, even more delighted â though for politeness' sake they pretended to demur:
âAfter all the hard work they'll be putting into it they
ought
to have a bit extra for themselves. Doesn't seem right that we should sit back and collect the jackpot without having to do anything for it!'
âDon't refuse the offer,' said Bao-chai, smiling. âIt's no less than you deserve. As long as you continue to keep a close watch on things and don't get slack and allow people to drink and gamble. Otherwise it puts me in such an awkward position. This isn't really my business, of course; but as you have no doubt heard, my aunt has repeatedly urged me to take over responsibility for it on the grounds that Mrs Zhu is too busy and the other young ladies are too young to attend to it. I can't refuse her, knowing that to do so would be deliberately adding to her worries. She has such indifferent health and so many household cares and I have so little to do myself that even if she were only a neighbour and not my aunt, I could scarcely refuse to help her. It's no good worrying that I shall make myself unpopular. If I care only about being popular and allow people to drink and gamble as much as they like, sooner or later someone who has drunk too much will start a quarrel. If an incident like that were to happen, how should I be able to look my aunt in the face? And think what it would be like for you. You would have forfeited your reputation as responsible seniors that you have taken so many years to build up. After all, the reason all these dozens of maids and the whole of this great Garden have been placed under your supervision is because you have served here under three or four generations of masters and are considered more dependable than any of the other servants. At a time when we all ought to be doing our best to keep up appearances, you will have allowed other people to drink and gamble. It will be bad enough if my aunt gets to hear of it and gives you a talking-to; but what if you are found out by the stewardesses and they decide to discipline you themselves without bothering to tell my aunt? What a disgrace, that people of your years should be punished by servants younger than yourselves! They would be within their rights, of course. As stewardesses they have power over all other members of the staff. But how much better if you conducted yourselves in such a way that you could keep your self-respect and not be in a position where they had you at their mercy! That is why I have thought of this plan for bringing you in a little extra money. I am hoping that everyone will now collaborate to make this
Garden such a model of discipline and good management that those who have the power to intervene, when they see how tight a discipline you are able to keep by yourselves, will decide that there is nothing for them to worry about and will respect you and leave you alone. Then we shall feel that the trouble we have taken in planning this little extra income for you was justified. Think about it!'
The women were all smiles of pleasure:
âYou're right, Miss Bao. Don't worry, Mrs Zhu and young ladies both! We should be lost souls indeed if we didn't show a bit of consideration for you after you have been so kind and thoughtful to us!'
At that moment Lin Zhi-xiao's wife came in:
âThe Zhen family from Nanking arrived in town yesterday. Today they have gone to the Palace to offer their felicitations. Some of their people have just arrived here to pay their respects. They have brought presents with them.'