66
WE THREE WILL SWEAR
BROTHERHOOD AND UNITY
OF AIMS AND SENTIMENTS
ROMANCE OF THE THREE KINGDOMS
(14TH CENTURY), LUO GUANZHONG
A
s the first of China’s four
great classical novels,
Romance of the Three
Kingdoms is a hugely significant
and influential work of literature.
As with the other three works—
The Water Margin, Journey to
the West, and Dream of the Red
Chamber—it marked a radical
departure from the “high style” of
Chinese poetic and philosophical
literature. Aimed at an audience
of common people, it employed
techniques akin to oral storytelling,
such as the use of vernacular
language and songs, and addressed
the reader directly. Despite being
heavily based on historical texts,
Romance of the Three Kingdoms
(like the other three classic Chinese
texts) is recognizably a novel.
It is a feat of imaginative writing
sustained over 800,000 words in
translation, and featuring more
than a thousand characters.
The first novel?
The book describes the collapse
of China’s Han dynasty into three
kingdoms in the 3rd century ce,
and the 111 years of warfare that
followed. Written over a thousand
IN CONTEXT
FOCUS
China’s four great
classical novels
AFTER
14th century The second
great classical novel, The
Water Margin by Shi Nai’an, is
the story of a band of outlaws
who oppose a corrupt ruler.
16th century The third great
classical novel, Journey to the
West, by Wu Cheng’en, tells of
a Buddhist monk’s pilgrimage
from China to India.
c.1618 Some scholars consider
The Plum in the Golden Vase,
its author unknown, to be the
fourth Chinese classical novel.
Although hugely popular, it
was suppressed because of
its overt sensual realism.
c.1791 The generally accepted
fourth great classical novel,
Dream of the Red Chamber
by Cao Xueqin, focuses
on the rise and fall of an
aristocratic family.
Luo Guanzhong
Although his existence is not in
question, very little else can be
confirmed about the life of Luo
Guanzhong (c.1330–c.1400). He
is traditionally regarded as the
author of the first of China’s four
great classical novels, Romance
of the Three Kingdoms, and
coauthor or editor of the second,
The Water Margin. He is also
thought to have written story
collections that deal with
China’s dynastic past, including
the fantastical tale The Three
Sui Quash the Demon’s Revolt.
But in 14th-century China,
attributing authorship to one
person may in fact denote that
they were the chief compiler and
editor of a large number of texts
by earlier storytellers.
Other key works
The Water Margin (as editor)
The Three Sui Quash the
Demons’ Revolt
The End of the Tang Dynasty
and the Period of the Five
Dynasties
Chronicle of the Sui and Tang
Dynasties
US_066-067_ThreeKingdoms.indd 66 08/10/2015 13:03