A Hundred Flowers

A Hundred Flowers

by

Gail Tsukiyama

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on A Hundred Flowers makes teaching easy.

Tao Lee Character Analysis

Tao is Sheng and Kai Ying’s seven-year-old son and Wei’s much-adored grandson. A bright, curious, and fearless little boy, Tao thrives at school, where he is ranked second in the class. But he cannot understand what has happened after his father is arrested for opposition to the Communist Party. Tao experiences the family’s trials from the limited viewpoint of a child and his reactions demonstrate both immaturity and his growing self-reliance. He decides to take matters into his own hands when he climbs the kapok tree to look for his father and when he runs away to the park, but in both instances, he suffers for this choice, realizing that he still needs others to help take care of him. But he also refuses to let his limp or the slow recovery of his injured leg defeat him, and he stands up for himself when he experiences bullying from Little Shan and Lai Hing. Tao loves his parents and adores his grandfather; he eagerly soaks up all the lessons Wei offers to teach him. And although he initially resents Suyin and Meizhen for taking up too much of his mother’s attention, he grows to love Suyin as a sister. As he grows and matures through a difficult period in his life, Tao begins to come of age and learns to think more compassionately about others.

Tao Lee Quotes in A Hundred Flowers

The A Hundred Flowers quotes below are all either spoken by Tao Lee or refer to Tao Lee. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Redemption Theme Icon
).
The Kapok Tree, July 1958: Kai Ying (I) Quotes

Kai Ying would never forget the sight of her pale little boy lying on the courtyard pavement, his leg twisted beneath him. A broken branch, she thought, a crushed leaf. He wasn’t moving. At that moment, she realized he might never move again and a feeling of terror overwhelmed her, stopping her abruptly and rooting her in place. […] She stood there while her heart raced so fast her whole body shook. He can’t be, she thought, he can’t. And try as she might, Kai Ying couldn’t think of one tea or soup that could bring the dead back to life. Her father-in-law, who was usually calm and in control, turned back to her, his eyes wide and frantic, his hands waving wildly in the air as he yelled for her to get help from Neighbor Lau, who had the only flatbed pedicab in the neighborhood.

Related Characters: Wei Lee, Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Sheng Lee
Related Symbols: Kapok Tree, White Cloud Mountain
Page Number: 11
Explanation and Analysis:
The Kapok Tree, July 1958: Wei Quotes

[H]is grandson was alone somewhere in the hospital and there was nothing he could do but wait. Wei wondered if it was some kind of retribution for his years of self-absorption. He had always been too involved in his own work, never taking into consideration how it might affect those around him. Rather than going into business as his father had wished […] he concentrated on his art history studies, preoccupied with teaching and research. He was thirty when he finally married Liang, and […] Sheng came along unexpectedly almost ten years later. Through it all, Wei continued to work long hours […] He told himself that his work was a part of all their legacies, but was it? By the time he paused long enough, Wei had missed so much of Sheng’s childhood that he had little memory of what his son was like as a boy.

Related Characters: Wei Lee, Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Sheng Lee, Liang Lee
Page Number: 23
Explanation and Analysis:
The Falling Boy, August 1958: Tao (II) Quotes

What Tao would never tell anyone, including his father, was what he really felt the day he fell from the kapok, how for just a moment he was flying instead of falling, and how happy it made him feel. Even now, he envisioned soaring through the gates and beyond the Ming garden wall, high above the narrow, crowded alleyways where he used to run and over the wide, tree-lined streets that led to far-off places he’d never seen. Tao felt so certain that if he had just kept on flying, he’d have reached White Cloud Mountain.

Related Characters: Tao Lee, Sheng Lee
Related Symbols: Kapok Tree, White Cloud Mountain
Page Number: 47-48
Explanation and Analysis:
Moon Festival, September 1958: Tao (II) Quotes

The beginning of the story always remained the same: Huoyi was commanded by the Emperor Yao to use his archery skills to shoot down nine of the ten suns to keep the earth from burning up. Upon completing the task, the emperor gave the famed archer a pill that granted him eternal life. Knowing its value, Huoyi left the pill at home with Chang’e when he was sent away on another mission for the emperor. From there, they story of why Chang’e swallowed the pill of immortality splintered off into different versions. So far, Tao’s favorite account was Chang’e having to protect the pill from Peng, one of Huoyi’s apprentice archers, who forcefully tried to take the pill from her. Knowing that she was unable to fight him off, her only choice was to swallow the pill herself.

Related Characters: Wei Lee, Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Sheng Lee, Suyin, Auntie Song, Chang’e, Huoyi, Suyin’s Stepfather
Related Symbols: Kapok Tree
Page Number: 85
Explanation and Analysis:
Moon Festival, September 1958: Tao (III) Quotes

“Do you want to hear the story of Huoyi and Chang’e now?” his grandfather asked.

Tao turned around and shook his head. “There’s no moon,” he answered.

“There’s still the story.”

“It’s not the same without the moon.”

His grandfather stroked his whiskers. “But we know the moon is still up there, beyond the rain and clouds.”

What good was the moon if you couldn’t see it? Tao thought. If it wasn’t there to help his ba ba to find his way home again? But, he nodded and limped back to the table and sat down, no longer caring which version of the myth his grandfather was going to tell him.

Related Characters: Wei Lee (speaker), Tao Lee (speaker), Sheng Lee, Chang’e, Huoyi
Related Symbols: Kapok Tree, White Cloud Mountain
Page Number: 102-103
Explanation and Analysis:
The World Intrudes, October 1958: Kai Ying Quotes

Cheng paused for a moment and looked her up and down. “Your husband is a lucky man to have a wife so devoted to him. Of course, I too am a family man, and I hate to think of your son so upset. You must be very lonely with your husband gone; perhaps we can find a way to make this situation work, while helping each other at the same time?”

It took a moment for Kai Ying to understand what he was saying […] She felt sick to her stomach and wanted nothing more than to run out of the hot, suffocating room. Instead, [she] steadied herself and ignored his question. She held out a red envelope, which contained a hundred yuan she had saved. She knew it was the way things were done, and hoped it would be enough for this vile man.

Related Characters: Comrade Cheng (speaker), Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Sheng Lee, Suyin, Auntie Song, Meizhen (The Baby)
Page Number: 133
Explanation and Analysis:
The World Intrudes, October 1958: Wei (II) Quotes

He glanced out to the courtyard and the kapok tree. When he turned back to Tao, he saw Sheng again at the same age, always so formal and closemouthed around him. He remembered all the times he heard Sheng talking to Liang, joking and laughing, but as soon as he entered the room, it was as if the air had changed. He and Sheng hadn’t learned to be friends until late in his life. Now he only wanted his son home again.

“I know…” Wei began, realizing the words that followed would change all of their lives forever. “I know because it was me. I was the one to write the letter, not your ba ba.”

Wei felt as if he’d been falling for the past year and had finally hit the ground. He stared down at the table and couldn’t look at either Kai Ying or Tao.

Related Characters: Wei Lee (speaker), Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Sheng Lee, Lai Hing
Related Symbols: Kapok Tree
Page Number: 143
Explanation and Analysis:

Wei pulled at his tunic collar and felt the room spinning, but he didn’t look away [… Kai Ying’s] dark eyes were unrecognizable, filled with something worse than anger: disappointment. […]

Outside came the singsong voice of the fruit peddler calling out “Bananas! Oranges! Mangoes!” […] He wanted to run out and buy all the fruit in the peddler’s basket as an offering, although he knew the sweetest fruits in all of Guangzhou couldn’t buy him forgiveness.

[…] Tao had stayed seated at the table. His grandson was no longer crying, but watching him with the distant gaze of a stranger. Wei hoped the boy would understand that he never meant for any of this to happen. But before he could say anything, Tao scraped back his chair and stood up.

“Tao, I’m sorry,” Wei said.

[…]

“I hate you,” Tao said, “I hate you.”

Related Characters: Wei Lee (speaker), Tao Lee (speaker), Kai Ying Lee, Sheng Lee
Page Number: 144-145
Explanation and Analysis:
After, October 1958: Kai Ying Quotes

Kai Ying saw it all so clearly now, the guilt that had to be consuming Wei each day as he retreated more and more into himself. As difficult as it was, Kai Ying understood why Sheng had taken her father-in-law’s place when the police came; Wei would have never been able to survive outside of the villa, much less at a reeducation facility. But why hadn’t Wei told her the truth? Why did he allow her to suffer for over a year, not knowing if there really was a letter, letting her believe that Sheng was the one to jeopardize everything they had? And how was she ever going to forgive a man who would let his pride betray his family?

Related Characters: Wei Lee, Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Sheng Lee
Page Number: 149-150
Explanation and Analysis:
After, October 1958: Song (I) Quotes

“I’ve been such a fool,” he said, his voice barely a whisper.

“My father used to say that the only fool is the man who can’t admit he’s one,” Song said. “Can’t you see Sheng knew what he was doing? It was his choice.”

“And my weakness,” Wei said. “I stood by and allowed him to be taken away in my place.”

“He knew what he was doing,” she repeated.

“I should never have put him in that position!”

“You know nothing about your own son […] and that should be your biggest regret. You’ve lived in the past for so long you can’t see what’s right in front of you. You make a mistake, an unintentional mistake. Who in this life hasn’t crossed that bridge? […] Sheng would never have allowed them to take you. He’s young and strong, he’ll survive.”

Related Characters: Wei Lee (speaker), Auntie Song (speaker), Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Sheng Lee
Page Number: 152-153
Explanation and Analysis:
After, October 1958: Wei (I) Quotes

Wei avoided the crowded main boulevards, instead turning onto the smaller side streets as he walked in and out of the narrow alleyways. He found himself following the same route he had walked for over forty years of teaching and Lingnan University. Old habits were a way of life for him. He knew the maze of intimate streets by heart and couldn’t bear the large crowds and bicyclists that used to push him along in directions he didn’t want to go. Wei was never comfortable being around too many people outside of the classroom, and over the years, he’d found ways to avoid them and move along at his own pace while remaining as inconspicuous as possible.

Related Characters: Wei Lee, Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee
Page Number: 158
Explanation and Analysis:
Stories, November 1958: Kai Ying (II) Quotes

Wei told her Sun and Moon had worked for his family ever since they were young women. Before then, they’d been silk workers from the village of Shun-de. When Wei was a boy of nine or ten, Sun and Moon were already middle-aged, and had been working for his family for over twenty years. “They were as different as the sun and moon,” her father-in-law said, and laughed. “There was hardly a time when they didn’t disagree about something. They would have argued about the time of day if they’d had the time!”

When Wei was not yet fifteen, Moon fell ill. Sun devoted herself to taking care of her until she died, six months later, Afterward, Sun stayed on until she became too old, but she was never the same.

Related Characters: Wei Lee (speaker), Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Sheng Lee, Liang Lee, Auntie Song, Sun, Moon
Page Number: 190-191
Explanation and Analysis:
Stories, November 1958: Tao (II) Quotes

For as long as he could remember, his ma ma had always been the one to teach him about what was right and wrong […] Even when he was a very little boy, she reminded him it was important that he always be able to take care of himself. Tao had wondered why, when she and ba ba and ye ye were there to take care of him. “Because there will be a time when we aren’t […] Not now […] “but a very, very long time from now.”

[…] Tao wanted to tell her that he wasn’t ready to take care of himself yet. Instead, he pressed his lips together and held the words in […]—I’m still a little boy and it hasn’t been a very long time like you promised, so why are both ba ba and ye ye gone?

Related Characters: Kai Ying Lee (speaker), Tao Lee (speaker), Wei Lee, Sheng Lee, Suyin, Auntie Song, Meizhen (The Baby)
Page Number: 215
Explanation and Analysis:
Waiting, November 1958: Tao (III) Quotes

He was secretly happy Suyin was waiting for him after school. She wasn’t so sickly-looking anymore and her skin had cleared. Walking next to her, he realized she was almost as tall as his mother and thin all over. […] She usually wore a dark cotton tunic and pants and he recognized one of his mother’s sweaters that she was wearing.

Tao liked walking home with Suyin; it made him feel older. He liked the way she nodded at him without saying a word, without making a fuss the way Auntie Song did trying to help him with his books or forcing him to put on his jacket as the days grew cooler. Suyin kept things simple and to the point. If he didn’t feel like talking to her, she never pushed.

“Ready to go?” she said.

Tao nodded that he was.

Related Characters: Suyin (speaker), Wei Lee, Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Auntie Song
Page Number: 235
Explanation and Analysis:
Waiting, November 1958: Suyin Quotes

Dongshan appeared different now that she was actually living there, the villas behind the tall walls no longer a mystery. They were filled with families and problems just like in Old Guangzhou. But instead of the multitude of voices screaming all at once from the crowded apartments, there was a quiet seething just below the surface in Dongshan. Upon closer scrutiny, she saw the cracks in the stone walls, the big houses crumbling slowly behind them in need of repair or paint or new tiles. All Suyin’s illusions of grandeur had suddenly disappeared. She would never be the same wide-eyed schoolgirl walking down the street for the very first time, and the thought brought both a sigh of relief and a moment of sorrow.

Related Characters: Wei Lee, Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Suyin, Auntie Song, Suyin’s Stepfather, Meizhen (The Baby)
Page Number: 242-243
Explanation and Analysis:
The City of Ghosts, November 1958: Tao Quotes

Tao thought about it. Little Shan had betrayed him to be one of Lai Hing’s stray dogs, and now he wanted to be friends again. Mao would have sent him away for less, just like he did his ba ba. He looked up and studied Little Shan’s face, trying to understand what had happened during the past few months, how his entire life had been turned upside down ever since he he’d fallen from the kapok tree. Yet, here he was, standing upright. Little Shan hadn’t totally abandoned him, having saved him from being pummeled by Lai Hing and his gang. Best friends are hard to come by, his grandfather had said. His ye ye was hard to come by. There would never be anyone else like his grandfather, and Tao wanted him back, but until then, Little Shan stood bundled up and waiting in front of him.

“Truce,” Tao said.

Related Characters: Tao Lee (speaker), Wei Lee, Sheng Lee, Little Shan, Lai Hing
Related Symbols: Kapok Tree
Page Number: 261-262
Explanation and Analysis:
The City of Ghosts, November 1958: Wei (IV) Quotes

Do you remember, he heard Liang’s voice ask him, when Sheng was a little boy and he was determined to fly his dragon kite even when there was no wind? He nodded at the memory, at the calm, cool watery sound of Liang’s voice, and how she had finally returned to him after so many weeks. Yes, he said. Wei could see her smile. Remember how he ran up and down the street trying to get enough wind until he finally gave up, she reminded him. And how you were the one who told him the wind would return again in no time, but he had to be patient. The wind will return again, Liang said. You’ve come this far, just listen to your own words.

Wei wanted to reach out for Liang, but was afraid she would disappear if he did, and remained content to feel her there beside him again.

Related Characters: Wei Lee (speaker), Liang Lee (speaker), Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Sheng Lee
Related Symbols: Kapok Tree
Page Number: 272-273
Explanation and Analysis:
The City of Ghosts, November 1958: Wei (V) Quotes

“I should be the one in here, not you.”

Sheng shook his head.

[…] Wei continued, “[…] I’ve created a world of grief for all of us.” He swallowed.

Ba ba, you don’t need to explain—”

Wei waved his hand to interrupt. “You’re here. I’ve seen you, touched you. At least I can bring that back to Kai Ying. But can you ever forgive me for writing the letter?” he asked. His fingers felt for the gouge in the table, following it to the edge.

“Forgive you? You don’t need to ask for forgiveness for writing the truth. I would have done the same, given time. I’m here for the both of us. We’re more alike than either of us knew.”

Wei saw the color return to Sheng’s face again as he spoke. We’re more alike than either of us knew. His words hung in the stale air […]

Related Characters: Wei Lee (speaker), Sheng Lee (speaker), Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee
Page Number: 280-281
Explanation and Analysis:
The City of Ghosts, November 1958: Kai Ying (III) Quotes

For the very first time since Tao had fallen from the kapok tree, she paused in front of it. It seemed as if an entire lifetime had passed in the five months since. […][Now] the tree stood skeletal, the branches remaining bare until […] the spring. […] Although Kai Ying knew it was foolish, she still dared to hope that they would all be together again by then.

Kai Ying stepped closer to the tree. At least let her hear from Wei again soon, she thought. The gash that her father-in-law had left in the trunk was a scar now, slightly deeper in color and hardly noticeable if you weren’t looking for it. Kai Ying’s fingers graced the smooth wound. She thought of it as just another example of nature’s genius; the kapok tree had healed itself.

From the kitchen, she heard Tao’s and Suyin’s voices and smiled.

Related Characters: Wei Lee, Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Sheng Lee, Suyin, Auntie Song
Related Symbols: Kapok Tree
Page Number: 284-285
Explanation and Analysis:
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A Hundred Flowers PDF

Tao Lee Quotes in A Hundred Flowers

The A Hundred Flowers quotes below are all either spoken by Tao Lee or refer to Tao Lee. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Redemption Theme Icon
).
The Kapok Tree, July 1958: Kai Ying (I) Quotes

Kai Ying would never forget the sight of her pale little boy lying on the courtyard pavement, his leg twisted beneath him. A broken branch, she thought, a crushed leaf. He wasn’t moving. At that moment, she realized he might never move again and a feeling of terror overwhelmed her, stopping her abruptly and rooting her in place. […] She stood there while her heart raced so fast her whole body shook. He can’t be, she thought, he can’t. And try as she might, Kai Ying couldn’t think of one tea or soup that could bring the dead back to life. Her father-in-law, who was usually calm and in control, turned back to her, his eyes wide and frantic, his hands waving wildly in the air as he yelled for her to get help from Neighbor Lau, who had the only flatbed pedicab in the neighborhood.

Related Characters: Wei Lee, Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Sheng Lee
Related Symbols: Kapok Tree, White Cloud Mountain
Page Number: 11
Explanation and Analysis:
The Kapok Tree, July 1958: Wei Quotes

[H]is grandson was alone somewhere in the hospital and there was nothing he could do but wait. Wei wondered if it was some kind of retribution for his years of self-absorption. He had always been too involved in his own work, never taking into consideration how it might affect those around him. Rather than going into business as his father had wished […] he concentrated on his art history studies, preoccupied with teaching and research. He was thirty when he finally married Liang, and […] Sheng came along unexpectedly almost ten years later. Through it all, Wei continued to work long hours […] He told himself that his work was a part of all their legacies, but was it? By the time he paused long enough, Wei had missed so much of Sheng’s childhood that he had little memory of what his son was like as a boy.

Related Characters: Wei Lee, Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Sheng Lee, Liang Lee
Page Number: 23
Explanation and Analysis:
The Falling Boy, August 1958: Tao (II) Quotes

What Tao would never tell anyone, including his father, was what he really felt the day he fell from the kapok, how for just a moment he was flying instead of falling, and how happy it made him feel. Even now, he envisioned soaring through the gates and beyond the Ming garden wall, high above the narrow, crowded alleyways where he used to run and over the wide, tree-lined streets that led to far-off places he’d never seen. Tao felt so certain that if he had just kept on flying, he’d have reached White Cloud Mountain.

Related Characters: Tao Lee, Sheng Lee
Related Symbols: Kapok Tree, White Cloud Mountain
Page Number: 47-48
Explanation and Analysis:
Moon Festival, September 1958: Tao (II) Quotes

The beginning of the story always remained the same: Huoyi was commanded by the Emperor Yao to use his archery skills to shoot down nine of the ten suns to keep the earth from burning up. Upon completing the task, the emperor gave the famed archer a pill that granted him eternal life. Knowing its value, Huoyi left the pill at home with Chang’e when he was sent away on another mission for the emperor. From there, they story of why Chang’e swallowed the pill of immortality splintered off into different versions. So far, Tao’s favorite account was Chang’e having to protect the pill from Peng, one of Huoyi’s apprentice archers, who forcefully tried to take the pill from her. Knowing that she was unable to fight him off, her only choice was to swallow the pill herself.

Related Characters: Wei Lee, Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Sheng Lee, Suyin, Auntie Song, Chang’e, Huoyi, Suyin’s Stepfather
Related Symbols: Kapok Tree
Page Number: 85
Explanation and Analysis:
Moon Festival, September 1958: Tao (III) Quotes

“Do you want to hear the story of Huoyi and Chang’e now?” his grandfather asked.

Tao turned around and shook his head. “There’s no moon,” he answered.

“There’s still the story.”

“It’s not the same without the moon.”

His grandfather stroked his whiskers. “But we know the moon is still up there, beyond the rain and clouds.”

What good was the moon if you couldn’t see it? Tao thought. If it wasn’t there to help his ba ba to find his way home again? But, he nodded and limped back to the table and sat down, no longer caring which version of the myth his grandfather was going to tell him.

Related Characters: Wei Lee (speaker), Tao Lee (speaker), Sheng Lee, Chang’e, Huoyi
Related Symbols: Kapok Tree, White Cloud Mountain
Page Number: 102-103
Explanation and Analysis:
The World Intrudes, October 1958: Kai Ying Quotes

Cheng paused for a moment and looked her up and down. “Your husband is a lucky man to have a wife so devoted to him. Of course, I too am a family man, and I hate to think of your son so upset. You must be very lonely with your husband gone; perhaps we can find a way to make this situation work, while helping each other at the same time?”

It took a moment for Kai Ying to understand what he was saying […] She felt sick to her stomach and wanted nothing more than to run out of the hot, suffocating room. Instead, [she] steadied herself and ignored his question. She held out a red envelope, which contained a hundred yuan she had saved. She knew it was the way things were done, and hoped it would be enough for this vile man.

Related Characters: Comrade Cheng (speaker), Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Sheng Lee, Suyin, Auntie Song, Meizhen (The Baby)
Page Number: 133
Explanation and Analysis:
The World Intrudes, October 1958: Wei (II) Quotes

He glanced out to the courtyard and the kapok tree. When he turned back to Tao, he saw Sheng again at the same age, always so formal and closemouthed around him. He remembered all the times he heard Sheng talking to Liang, joking and laughing, but as soon as he entered the room, it was as if the air had changed. He and Sheng hadn’t learned to be friends until late in his life. Now he only wanted his son home again.

“I know…” Wei began, realizing the words that followed would change all of their lives forever. “I know because it was me. I was the one to write the letter, not your ba ba.”

Wei felt as if he’d been falling for the past year and had finally hit the ground. He stared down at the table and couldn’t look at either Kai Ying or Tao.

Related Characters: Wei Lee (speaker), Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Sheng Lee, Lai Hing
Related Symbols: Kapok Tree
Page Number: 143
Explanation and Analysis:

Wei pulled at his tunic collar and felt the room spinning, but he didn’t look away [… Kai Ying’s] dark eyes were unrecognizable, filled with something worse than anger: disappointment. […]

Outside came the singsong voice of the fruit peddler calling out “Bananas! Oranges! Mangoes!” […] He wanted to run out and buy all the fruit in the peddler’s basket as an offering, although he knew the sweetest fruits in all of Guangzhou couldn’t buy him forgiveness.

[…] Tao had stayed seated at the table. His grandson was no longer crying, but watching him with the distant gaze of a stranger. Wei hoped the boy would understand that he never meant for any of this to happen. But before he could say anything, Tao scraped back his chair and stood up.

“Tao, I’m sorry,” Wei said.

[…]

“I hate you,” Tao said, “I hate you.”

Related Characters: Wei Lee (speaker), Tao Lee (speaker), Kai Ying Lee, Sheng Lee
Page Number: 144-145
Explanation and Analysis:
After, October 1958: Kai Ying Quotes

Kai Ying saw it all so clearly now, the guilt that had to be consuming Wei each day as he retreated more and more into himself. As difficult as it was, Kai Ying understood why Sheng had taken her father-in-law’s place when the police came; Wei would have never been able to survive outside of the villa, much less at a reeducation facility. But why hadn’t Wei told her the truth? Why did he allow her to suffer for over a year, not knowing if there really was a letter, letting her believe that Sheng was the one to jeopardize everything they had? And how was she ever going to forgive a man who would let his pride betray his family?

Related Characters: Wei Lee, Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Sheng Lee
Page Number: 149-150
Explanation and Analysis:
After, October 1958: Song (I) Quotes

“I’ve been such a fool,” he said, his voice barely a whisper.

“My father used to say that the only fool is the man who can’t admit he’s one,” Song said. “Can’t you see Sheng knew what he was doing? It was his choice.”

“And my weakness,” Wei said. “I stood by and allowed him to be taken away in my place.”

“He knew what he was doing,” she repeated.

“I should never have put him in that position!”

“You know nothing about your own son […] and that should be your biggest regret. You’ve lived in the past for so long you can’t see what’s right in front of you. You make a mistake, an unintentional mistake. Who in this life hasn’t crossed that bridge? […] Sheng would never have allowed them to take you. He’s young and strong, he’ll survive.”

Related Characters: Wei Lee (speaker), Auntie Song (speaker), Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Sheng Lee
Page Number: 152-153
Explanation and Analysis:
After, October 1958: Wei (I) Quotes

Wei avoided the crowded main boulevards, instead turning onto the smaller side streets as he walked in and out of the narrow alleyways. He found himself following the same route he had walked for over forty years of teaching and Lingnan University. Old habits were a way of life for him. He knew the maze of intimate streets by heart and couldn’t bear the large crowds and bicyclists that used to push him along in directions he didn’t want to go. Wei was never comfortable being around too many people outside of the classroom, and over the years, he’d found ways to avoid them and move along at his own pace while remaining as inconspicuous as possible.

Related Characters: Wei Lee, Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee
Page Number: 158
Explanation and Analysis:
Stories, November 1958: Kai Ying (II) Quotes

Wei told her Sun and Moon had worked for his family ever since they were young women. Before then, they’d been silk workers from the village of Shun-de. When Wei was a boy of nine or ten, Sun and Moon were already middle-aged, and had been working for his family for over twenty years. “They were as different as the sun and moon,” her father-in-law said, and laughed. “There was hardly a time when they didn’t disagree about something. They would have argued about the time of day if they’d had the time!”

When Wei was not yet fifteen, Moon fell ill. Sun devoted herself to taking care of her until she died, six months later, Afterward, Sun stayed on until she became too old, but she was never the same.

Related Characters: Wei Lee (speaker), Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Sheng Lee, Liang Lee, Auntie Song, Sun, Moon
Page Number: 190-191
Explanation and Analysis:
Stories, November 1958: Tao (II) Quotes

For as long as he could remember, his ma ma had always been the one to teach him about what was right and wrong […] Even when he was a very little boy, she reminded him it was important that he always be able to take care of himself. Tao had wondered why, when she and ba ba and ye ye were there to take care of him. “Because there will be a time when we aren’t […] Not now […] “but a very, very long time from now.”

[…] Tao wanted to tell her that he wasn’t ready to take care of himself yet. Instead, he pressed his lips together and held the words in […]—I’m still a little boy and it hasn’t been a very long time like you promised, so why are both ba ba and ye ye gone?

Related Characters: Kai Ying Lee (speaker), Tao Lee (speaker), Wei Lee, Sheng Lee, Suyin, Auntie Song, Meizhen (The Baby)
Page Number: 215
Explanation and Analysis:
Waiting, November 1958: Tao (III) Quotes

He was secretly happy Suyin was waiting for him after school. She wasn’t so sickly-looking anymore and her skin had cleared. Walking next to her, he realized she was almost as tall as his mother and thin all over. […] She usually wore a dark cotton tunic and pants and he recognized one of his mother’s sweaters that she was wearing.

Tao liked walking home with Suyin; it made him feel older. He liked the way she nodded at him without saying a word, without making a fuss the way Auntie Song did trying to help him with his books or forcing him to put on his jacket as the days grew cooler. Suyin kept things simple and to the point. If he didn’t feel like talking to her, she never pushed.

“Ready to go?” she said.

Tao nodded that he was.

Related Characters: Suyin (speaker), Wei Lee, Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Auntie Song
Page Number: 235
Explanation and Analysis:
Waiting, November 1958: Suyin Quotes

Dongshan appeared different now that she was actually living there, the villas behind the tall walls no longer a mystery. They were filled with families and problems just like in Old Guangzhou. But instead of the multitude of voices screaming all at once from the crowded apartments, there was a quiet seething just below the surface in Dongshan. Upon closer scrutiny, she saw the cracks in the stone walls, the big houses crumbling slowly behind them in need of repair or paint or new tiles. All Suyin’s illusions of grandeur had suddenly disappeared. She would never be the same wide-eyed schoolgirl walking down the street for the very first time, and the thought brought both a sigh of relief and a moment of sorrow.

Related Characters: Wei Lee, Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Suyin, Auntie Song, Suyin’s Stepfather, Meizhen (The Baby)
Page Number: 242-243
Explanation and Analysis:
The City of Ghosts, November 1958: Tao Quotes

Tao thought about it. Little Shan had betrayed him to be one of Lai Hing’s stray dogs, and now he wanted to be friends again. Mao would have sent him away for less, just like he did his ba ba. He looked up and studied Little Shan’s face, trying to understand what had happened during the past few months, how his entire life had been turned upside down ever since he he’d fallen from the kapok tree. Yet, here he was, standing upright. Little Shan hadn’t totally abandoned him, having saved him from being pummeled by Lai Hing and his gang. Best friends are hard to come by, his grandfather had said. His ye ye was hard to come by. There would never be anyone else like his grandfather, and Tao wanted him back, but until then, Little Shan stood bundled up and waiting in front of him.

“Truce,” Tao said.

Related Characters: Tao Lee (speaker), Wei Lee, Sheng Lee, Little Shan, Lai Hing
Related Symbols: Kapok Tree
Page Number: 261-262
Explanation and Analysis:
The City of Ghosts, November 1958: Wei (IV) Quotes

Do you remember, he heard Liang’s voice ask him, when Sheng was a little boy and he was determined to fly his dragon kite even when there was no wind? He nodded at the memory, at the calm, cool watery sound of Liang’s voice, and how she had finally returned to him after so many weeks. Yes, he said. Wei could see her smile. Remember how he ran up and down the street trying to get enough wind until he finally gave up, she reminded him. And how you were the one who told him the wind would return again in no time, but he had to be patient. The wind will return again, Liang said. You’ve come this far, just listen to your own words.

Wei wanted to reach out for Liang, but was afraid she would disappear if he did, and remained content to feel her there beside him again.

Related Characters: Wei Lee (speaker), Liang Lee (speaker), Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Sheng Lee
Related Symbols: Kapok Tree
Page Number: 272-273
Explanation and Analysis:
The City of Ghosts, November 1958: Wei (V) Quotes

“I should be the one in here, not you.”

Sheng shook his head.

[…] Wei continued, “[…] I’ve created a world of grief for all of us.” He swallowed.

Ba ba, you don’t need to explain—”

Wei waved his hand to interrupt. “You’re here. I’ve seen you, touched you. At least I can bring that back to Kai Ying. But can you ever forgive me for writing the letter?” he asked. His fingers felt for the gouge in the table, following it to the edge.

“Forgive you? You don’t need to ask for forgiveness for writing the truth. I would have done the same, given time. I’m here for the both of us. We’re more alike than either of us knew.”

Wei saw the color return to Sheng’s face again as he spoke. We’re more alike than either of us knew. His words hung in the stale air […]

Related Characters: Wei Lee (speaker), Sheng Lee (speaker), Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee
Page Number: 280-281
Explanation and Analysis:
The City of Ghosts, November 1958: Kai Ying (III) Quotes

For the very first time since Tao had fallen from the kapok tree, she paused in front of it. It seemed as if an entire lifetime had passed in the five months since. […][Now] the tree stood skeletal, the branches remaining bare until […] the spring. […] Although Kai Ying knew it was foolish, she still dared to hope that they would all be together again by then.

Kai Ying stepped closer to the tree. At least let her hear from Wei again soon, she thought. The gash that her father-in-law had left in the trunk was a scar now, slightly deeper in color and hardly noticeable if you weren’t looking for it. Kai Ying’s fingers graced the smooth wound. She thought of it as just another example of nature’s genius; the kapok tree had healed itself.

From the kitchen, she heard Tao’s and Suyin’s voices and smiled.

Related Characters: Wei Lee, Kai Ying Lee, Tao Lee, Sheng Lee, Suyin, Auntie Song
Related Symbols: Kapok Tree
Page Number: 284-285
Explanation and Analysis: