|
The
Former Residence of Lu Xun (1881-1936), a Chinese style
home built around a courtyard, is situated near Fuchengmen
in the West City District. The easternmost room in the
northern side of the courtyard belonged to Lu Xun’
s mother and the western room to Lun Xun’ s wife.
The rooms on the southern side of the courtyard served
as a sitting room and library. Attached to the northern
side of the courtyard is a small room known as the “Tiger
Tail,” which was used as his study and bedroom.
Lu
Xun bought the house in February 1923 with money borrowed
from friends, and in the two years and three months that
he lived there he wrote Tomb, Wild Grass, Aureole Anthology,
Aureole Anthology Part II and the famous collection of
short stories entitled uncertainty. As well he completed
a large number of translations. Next to the “Tiger
Tail”is a tiny garden with a thorny plum tree which,
together with the lilac tree in the front courtyard, were
planted by Lu Xun himself.
After 1949, Lu Xun’s wife Xu Gaungping donated the
residence to the state, and in 1856 the government turned
it into the Lu Xun Museum. The museum’ s courtyard
is filled with flowers and trees. Inside the main entrance
of the exhibition hall facing the doorway is a commemorative
verse, in front of which stands a bronze bust of Lu Xun.
The first section of the exhibition displays photographs,
unpublished manuscripts and letters the writer left behind
on his death. Included here are photographs of his hometown
of Shaoxing in Zhejiang Province and pictures of the scenes
described in his short stories. On display are also an
anatomy notebook that he used when he studied in Japan,
a copy of the magazine New Youth which carried his first
short story “Diary of a Madman” and a proof
copy of Qu Qiubai’ s Collected Narrations Written
at Sea (Haishang Shulin) which Lu Xun proofread for the
author. The exhibit, which attracts the most attention,
is the facsimile of the diary that Lu Xun wrote the day
before he died.
On display in the second section of the exhibition are
a collection of photographs of Chinese and foreign memorial
activities held on the occasion of Lu Xun’ s death,
Lu Xun’ s works translated into 24 different languages,
and a set of the Complete Works of Lu Xun published in
1938.
Lu Xun’ s library of 16,000 books stands to the
west of the exhibition hall. Many of the volumes on display
were re-bound by Lu Xun himself.
The Lu Xun Museum was official opened on October 19, 1956
to mark the 20th anniversary of the writer’ s death.
In 1980, the museum was expanded. The museum now houses
an exhibition of Luxun’ s life from his youth in
Shaoxing to his death in Shanghai. |