I read the article “ Fool’s Sacrifice”( Shanghai-1930s), in the book “ East and West” . This article tells about a British couple living in Shanghai. When the wife returned to the England, she fell in love with another Englishman. Although she still returned to Shanghai, she would not let her husband into her room. She even wanted to die. When her husband found out the reason, after painstaking pondering , Determined to make sacrifices for the happiness of his wife, decided to fake that he was in love with another woman and wanted to divorce her, so that his wife could be free. He bought a steamer ticket sent her back to England. This story is the opposite of the previous article « until tomorrow », It talked about women accepting open culture and defeating traditional culture.
1) (A) Freddie Hill waited at the dock of Shanghai for his wife Marian, she had been gone five months to England, she get away once in a year or two. He had missed her horribly, Marian had been at eighteen when he married her.They had lived together fifteen years and no kids, but still liking each other best.Freddie stood very short and sturdy and thick in the crowd. It’s summer now. Suddenly he saw her standing by the rail, she was very pretty,and she threw him a little kiss and he noticed how thin she was.
At dinner, he had seen she left half of her portion, thick anxiety gathered in his heart. “You go to bed now”, he said. “ you look tired”. And she said: ‘I am all right but so tired, terribly tired. Gave me a few days’.
So he had waited, wait until she made some sign of being rested and herself again, but a month passed, she made no sign. He began to think that something was different between them.
(B) Every day she wanted to go somewhere, She said: “I’m tired of the house”. Then Winter was coming. One night, Freddie had gone to her room and stood by her bed, she was already asleep. When she felt his hands, she cried out: “ Don’t, I’m so tired tonight “. The slow anger in him broke. He shouted: “ the truth is you are tired of your husband”. She answered: “It’s true”, “I hadn’t been married to you a week before I knew it was all wrong. But I’d marry you, you are such a good sort , I’m fond of you still — only now I must not be touched”. “ There’s another fellow” he whispered. She answered: “this summer I met someone, we both know how we feel. But I told him how good you are”.
(C) He thought what sort of a chap the man was. He had to know something about that man. He said to Marian: “l think you ought to tell me—it is due me”. Marian said: “ Don’t talk. You have had all that is due you” and at night, she went into her room and shut the door. After many days, he asked her if she wasn’t getting over it, “ I’m getting jolly tired waiting”. Marian answered: “No, I can’t ever”, she rushed to the window, “ I’d kill myself”.She cried out “ I am so unhappy”.
(D) He knew she had never loved him. He had never been worthy of her beauty as a wife. He thought “ I ought to be the one to die”. But he couldn’t kill himself . He could tell Marian he had someone, that would set her free.
He had bought her a ticket and once more they were at the dock, it was spring now . Marian said:” I wish I could love you!” And he marched from the cabin back to his empty house.
2) I think:
Although Freddie was kind to Marian, he was short, thick, and not much of an artist, and Marian was not satisfied. When Marian met another satisfied man in England, she fell in love with this man. She was in great pain when she returned to Shanghai. Freddie loved Marian deeply, and in order not to cause Marian pain, decides to divorce her, let her go back to England, and send her to the dock. Freddie is right, he's not a fool. Maybe Marian will came back to him again.
In the 1930s, the status of women in Western countries was higher than that in Eastern countries, which was also a cultural difference.
Discussion prompts:
?Lawrence wrote his novels between 1911 and 1929, and it’s very likely that Pearl Buck knew of him and had read some of his work. In 1921 she was teaching English literature at the University of Nanking and by 1926 had earned her master’s degree in English at Cornell University. Buck’s description of Fred’s reaction to Lawrence’s novels suggests her familiarity with Lawrence’s subject matter and style and how a less sophisticated reader might react to them.