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Eighteen
Qianhai Xijie Street, a deep courtyard located near Beijing's
Shicha Lake, is the former residence of Guo Moruo, an
outstanding Chinese writer, poet, dramatist, historian,
archaeologist and paleographer.
The
writer was born into a landlord's family in Leshan County,
Sichuan Province, in 1892, as Guo Kaizhen. As a boy, he
had access to a wide selection of literary works that
sparked his lifelong interest in poetry and language.
He went to Japan in 1914, first to study medicine and
then literature. In 1918, he began to write a new style
of poetry under the pen name Guo Moruo, a name he took
from the Mo and Ruo rivers of his beloved hometown.
In
1921, Guo returned to China and published his poetry collection
The Goddesses, laying a foundation for Chinese new-style
poetry, which won immediate popularity. He again went
to Japan in 1928. During his stay there, he devoted himself
to the study of Chinese history and characters. He returned
to his homeland in 1937 and wrote many works in succession,
including the historical plays Qu Yuan and Commander's
Tiger-Shaped Tally and a history book, The Bronze Age.
Following
the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949,
he held a number of high-level government posts. He was,
among other things, vice-premier of the Government Administration
Council, vice chairman of the Standing Committee of the
National People's Congress and Chinese People's Political
Consultative Conference, chairman of the China Federation
of Literature and Art Circles, president of the Chinese
Academy of Sciences. While he handled government affairs,
he continued with his literary ambitions, penning the
historical plays Cai Wenji and Empress Wu Zetian, the
poetry collections Ode to New China, Easterly Wind, and
Tides, and the academic work Li Bai and Du Fu.
On
June 12, 1978, the heart of the man who had made great
contributions to Chinese science, culture and politics
stopped beating.
The
courtyard where Guo had lived for 15 years, from November
1963 until his death, was formerly a prince's garden during
the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). It was listed as an important
cultural relic under state protection in 1982, on Guo's
90th birthday, and officially opened to tourists in 1988.
It
was in this small courtyard that Guo wrote his theses,
monographs, poems and other works. Many manuscripts, books
and documents are still kept there.
Guo
loved nature. The flowers and plants Guo and his wife
planted continue to flourish.
On
the lawn in north end of the courtyard stands a gingko
tree, which Guo called "the national tree of China"
and "a living monument to Chinese culture."
There is a short story behind this tree. In 1954, Yu Liqun,
Guo's wife, left Beijing for medical treatment. Missing
her very much, Guo brought a tree seedling from a forestry
center and planted it in his courtyard at 5 Dayuan Lane
in Xicheng District. He named it the Mother Tree. Guo
taught his children to water and trim it and asked them
to pray for the early recovery of their mother. When the
family moved in 1963, they also moved the tree to the
new courtyard. The Mother Tree is flourishing to this
day and is heavy with fruit every autumn.
On
the lawn is a bronze statue of Guo, a work by Situ Zhaoguang,
a well-known sculptor and professor at the Central Academy
of Fine Arts, on the 10th anniversary of Guo's death.
The shining statue of Guo gazes forever at the Mother
Tree.
Add:
No.18 Qianhai Xijie Street;
Opening
time: 9:00-16:30 (Tuesday - Sunday);
Entry
Ticket: 8 yuan for grown-ups, 4 yuan for students;
Transport:
Bus No.s 13, 42, 107, 111, 118, 701, 810, 823 and 850,
get off at back door of the Beihai Park.

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