Tea drinking and folk customs
2 min readDrinking tea, a long-established custom popular with the Chinese people, is closely related to their life in a myriad of ways. It can not only refresh the mind but also add a poetic quality to life
Wang Zengqi(1920-1997), a contemporary Chinese writer, once recalled his student years in the Southwest Union University in Kunming and remembered one poem on the wall of a teahouse near the university In those good times of old.
To a teahouse my father I followed
Before the teahouse I played with shells
And at the lane entrance with sand
Wang Zengqi believed this was”a truly fine poem. “The author describes the itual of following his father to a teahouse during his childhood. He played with shells and sand at the entrance to the lane in front of the teahouse. What a happy time it was! The whole poem expresses a soft, touching melancholy permeated with strong poetic flavor.
Many Chinese folk customs are related to tea, such as the wedding ceremony Tea trees grow out of seeds, and cannot be moved, so newly weds customarily plant tea seeds to symbolize their devotion to love. The engagement ceremony is called a”tea ceremony”in China, which is still popular in some places Many love songs are related to tea drinking, too. According to the records of lu You(1125-1210), a Song-dynasty poet, in some places. single young men and women often met to sing: “”Young girl, as pretty as tea leaves, /Would you please come out for a cup of tea? “”The song compares a beautiful girl to refreshing tea leaves, while the wooer expresses his love for the girl by inviting her to tea Tea drinking, with the touch of love, can be very romantic, along with its stron aesthetic elements. In the collection of short stories entitled Strange tales from Make-do studio liaozhai zhiyi), by Qing-dynasty(1616-1911) writer Pu Songling(1640-1715), there is a story telling of the love of Wang Gui’ an and Yunniang. When the young man Wang Gui’ an visits Yunniang’s home in a dream. he witnesses a scene of “a silk tree in full bloom “as described in the following folksong
My home is situated by the Pantuo river,,
Come have tea some time, my sweetheart
With earthen walls and a thatched roof
In front a silk tree in full bloom
The silk tree and drinking tea both symbolize love and marriage. With these two images, this romantic love song sounds even more vivid and poetic.