"Guide the people by law, subdue them by punishment; they may shun crime, but will be void of shame. Guide them by example, subdue them by courtesy; they will learn shame and come to be good."- Confucius
Robert
H. van Gulik was a diplomat, sinologist and a writer whose career
highlights included being the Dutch ambassador to Japan and authoring a series
of novels, short stories and a couple of novellas about Judge Dee – which
popularized historical mysteries and established them as a proper sub-genre in
the 1950-and 60s.
The series is set in 7th century China,
during the Tang dynasty (AD 600-700), when a lauded magistrate and statesman,
by the name of Di
Renjie, presided over the courts of the Imperial Governments of the time.
Celebrated Cases of Judge Dee (c. 1949) is a translation of an 18th century novel, Dee Goong
An, which was loosely based on some of the cases handled by Di Renjie and
formed an unofficial starting point of the series. And Di Renjie was, of
course, the model for Judge Dee.
The plots were constructed along the
lines of the classical, Chinese detective stories, in which several, seemingly
unrelated, cases are braided together, but Van Gulik threw out the supernatural
agencies and replaced them with 20th century plot devices – such as a stronger
emphasis on whodunit and the occasional locked
room mystery.
Judge Dee at Work: Eight Chinese
Detective Stories (1967) is a collection of short
stories and I have read them before, but they were spread out over two
different volumes. The title of the Dutch edition of Judge Dee at Work
is Zes zaken voor Rechter Tie (Six Cases for Judge Dee, 1961),
which didn't include "Five Auspicious Clouds" and "He Came With the Rain." They
were published separately as Vijf gelukbrengende wolken (Five
Auspicious Clouds, 1969) and included the novella Vier vingers (Four
Fingers, 1964), which was published in The Monkey and the Tiger
(1965) as The Morning of the Monkey.
This was also the first time I read a Rechter
Tie book in English. So it was somewhat like rediscovering this wonderful
series.
"Five Auspicious Clouds" is the first
story from this collection and occurred when Judge Dee served for only a week
as magistrate of Peng-lai, which is where my favorite entry in this series took
place – namely the fabulous Fantoom in Foe-lai (The Chinese Gold
Murders, c. 1959). Judge Dee is confronted with the apparent suicide of the
wife of a notable legal-mind, but there are enough signs pointing towards
murder and the extinguished, pentagon-shaped incense-clock seemed to have fixed
the time of death. A good, somewhat clever story of domestic murder and notable
for having found a way to use the smashed-watch-trick... in the year 633!
"The Red Tape Murder" takes place in the
same coastal district as the previous story, Peng-lai, in which Van Gulik allowed
Judge Dee to be drawn into a military affair and exonerate Colonel Meng of a
murder-charge and solve a pesky, bureaucratic problem of a missing document – a
document interestingly titled P-404. They were unable to find that page! Anyhow,
the murder of Colonel Soo turns out to be an impossible crime, because the
innocent Meng appears to have been the only one who could've loosened the
deadly arrow, but Judge Dee finds an alternative explanation and one that's
reasonable clued. I've grown quite fond of this story, but not everyone is
going to like it.
Six Cases for Judge Dee |
Judge Dee still presided over Peng-lai as
magistrate in "He Came With the Rain" and takes place on one of the hottest, wettest
days of the dog-days. A pawn-broker is found stabbed and hacked to pieces at an
old, abandoned watchtower in the marches and the only witness is a deaf-mute
girl – who lived in the crumbling tower. A couple of soldiers apprehended a
blood-covered suspect, but, of course, Judge Dee comes to a different
conclusion. This is one of those stories that should be read as a historical
story and it’s character development instead of as a detective story.
"The Murder on the Lotus Pond" has a
change of scenery, the district of Han-yuan, which was the backdrop for The
Chinese Lake Murders (1960) and The Haunted Monastery (1961), but in
this minor case an elderly poet is killed in his garden pavilion. The setting and
characters are very well drawn, but it's a minor, rather forgettable case and
the murderer only got caught because he/she jabbered too much.
"The Two Beggars" takes the reader to yet
another district, Poo-yang, where The Chinese Bell Murders (1958) and The
Emperor's Pearl (1963) took place, but Judge Dee's time as magistrate of
this district also coincided with his visit to Paradise Island – recorded in The
Red Pavilion (1964) and features several impossible murders. However, this
short story seems to have been missed by everyone as just such a story, which
begins when Judge Dee witnesses a ghostly apparition during the Feast of
Lanterns. The escape of the apparition from a watched, moonlit garden, in which
the "garden gate to the park outside was securely locked and barred,"
coincides with the discovery of a dead beggar at the bottom of a drain. The
encounter in the garden is explained by itself towards the end of the story,
but initial sighting gives Judge Dee a good reason to take a closer look as the
supposed accidental death of the beggar and eventually discovers a murderer. A
well-told and constructed story.
The following story, "The Wrong Sword,"
remains in the district of Poo-Yang, but Judge Dee is absent for a large
portion of the investigation and leaves two of his lieutenants, Ma Joong and
Chiao Tai, in charge of tribunal. A case and an opportunity to prove themselves
presents itself during a street performance: someone swapped a "trick sword"
for a real one and that came at the expensive of a young boy's life. It’s an
interesting approach to allow a troupe of Watson's investigate a flurry of
potential murderers, before Judge Dee correctly arranges the gather information
and evidence upon his return.
"The Coffins of the Emperor" takes place in
the isolated district of Lan-fang, the location of The Chinese Maze Murders
(1952) and The Phantom of the Temple (1966), which is situated on the
Western border of the empire – which has become a dark and desolate place
during a warring conflict with the Tartar's. Judge Dee offers his assistance to
the local military leader in solving a potential case of treason and clearing
yet another military officer from a murder charge, before his head rolls off
his shoulder the next morning, but the main attraction of this story is dark,
sickly mood of impending doom permeating the plot.
The final story of the lot, "Murder on
New Year's Eve," takes place in that same desolate place, but the explanation
ends both this collection and Judge Dee's run as magistrate of Fan-lang on a
positive note. It's a short, touchy story and that's all that can be said about
it without giving anything away.
So, all in all, Judge Dee at Work is an
excellent and well-balanced collection of stories, which can be read as both
detective stories or historical fiction. And that makes it hard to be
disappointed if you're a fan of one or both genres, but that goes for the
entire series. Recommended!