**1. Introduction**

The *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* is a newly discovered manuscript, used in the "telling scriptures" (*jiangjing* 講經, Suzhou dialect: *k<sup>ь</sup> 51 Ҡin44*)<sup>1</sup> tradition in Changshu 常 熟, which represents ritualized storytelling based on the vernacular narrative texts called "precious scrolls" (*baojuan* 寶卷).<sup>2</sup> It is the manuscript copied by Li Desheng 李德生 in the *guiyou* 癸酉 year (presumably 1993), as stated in a note at the end of the manuscript; now in possession of Xu Juzhen 徐菊珍 (b. 1950), the female performer of telling scriptures from Weijiatang 衛家塘 village in Zhangqiao 張橋 district of modern Changshu city.<sup>3</sup> One can suppose that Li Desheng represents the older generation of performers in this area, as it is common for the performers to inherit manuscripts of their teachers and older friends. According to the hereditary master of telling scriptures Yu Dingjun 余鼎君 (b. 1942) from the Shanghu district of Changshu,<sup>4</sup> this variant of text is still in use by the precious scrolls performers in Zhangqiao district (Wu 2015, vol. 2, p. 1116).

Though the manuscript by Li Desheng has the title of the *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* on the cover, it represents an adaptation of the *Precious Scroll of Mulian* (Mulian baojuan 目蓮寶卷), which is a text commonly used in the modern tradition of telling scriptures in Changshu. This is attested not only by the contents of this text, but also its self-reference as the *Precious Scroll of Mulian*. For example, the concluding verses of this variant say: "The *Scroll of Mulian* rescuing his mother has ended ... " (目蓮救母卷

**Citation:** Berezkin, Rostislav. 2021. The *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* in the "Telling Scriptures" Tradition in Changshu, Jiangsu, China. *Religions* 12: 865. https://doi.org/10.3390/ rel12100865

Academic Editor: Xiaohuan Zhao

Received: 13 September 2021 Accepted: 6 October 2021 Published: 13 October 2021

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**Copyright:** © 2021 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by/ 4.0/).

已 滿) (Wu 2015, vol. 2, p. 1131). Still, its labelling as the *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* demonstrates the original ritual function of this text.

Here a few words on the history and modern state of development of "telling scriptures" in Changshu are necessary. It is alternatively known there as "scroll recitation" (*xuanjuan* 宣 卷, Suzhou dialect: *sѲ44 Ұyø51*), the name common for this type of performative literature in the whole Jiangnan region (Lower Yangtze Valley). It is performed by the "masters of telling scriptures" (*jiangjing xiansheng* 講 經 先 生, Suzhou dialect: *k<sup>ь</sup>51 Ұin44 sѲ44 sã44*) who have professional or semi-professional status; besides scroll recitation, they also perform life-cycle rituals for the local believers.<sup>5</sup> Precious scrolls are used as scripts in this type of storytelling, hence its local name is "telling scriptures". While they are commonly perceived as the Buddhist texts (scriptures) by the locals,<sup>6</sup> they narrate stories of deities of different origins, including local heroes.<sup>7</sup>

The exact origins of this tradition are not known, but overall its development can be traced back to the spread of "scroll recitation" in the Wu-speaking areas of the Lower Yangtze Valley in the nineteenth century (Che 2009, pp. 207–33). The earliest exactly dated text that may be associated with telling scriptures in Changshu is dated 1811 (discovered in 2012 in the collection of a local performer) (Wu 2015, vol. 2, p. 1116). At the same time, the modern tradition uses even older texts, which are dated to the sixteenth-seventeenth centuries (Che 2009, pp. 394–95). This especially concerns the "funerary" services involving "telling scriptures" that are characteristic for the Changshu area.<sup>8</sup> These materials can prove that this art in Changshu may have even earlier origins, going back to the period of the so-called "sectarian" precious scrolls (sixteenth-eighteenth centuries).<sup>9</sup>

In this article, I use the manuscript by Li Desheng for a case study of a precious scroll functioning in the context of modern telling scriptures in Changshu. While analyzing special features of this text, we can discover more details of the ritual and cultural context of telling scriptures. At the same time, these materials also can demonstrate difference between telling scriptures in Changshu and similar traditions in the nearby localities. In this article, I mainly use materials, collected during my fieldwork in Changshu and adjacent areas in 2011–2018, and also refer to the related fieldwork reports by Chinese scholars.

### **2. The Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond and Precious Scroll of Mulian Three Rebirths**

The contents of the *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* can be traced back to the traditional versions of the *Precious Scroll of Mulian*, which widely circulated in Jiangnan since the end of the nineteenth century. This is the famous *Precious Scroll of Mulian's Three Rebirths* (*Mulian sanshi baojuan* 目 蓮三世 寶 卷; hereafter abbreviated as the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths*), the earliest available printed version of which is dated 1876.<sup>10</sup> It is represented in the variety of woodblock and lithographic printed editions, made by the publishers in the urban centers of the Jiangnan region at the end of the nineteenth–early twentieth centuries.<sup>11</sup>

Although the story of monk Mulian (Skt. Maudgalyayana; one of the major disciples ¯ of Buddha Shakyamuni in the Buddhist scriptures) rescuing his mother's soul from the afterlife punishment in the underworld is of ancient origin; the developed form of this originally Buddhist subject appeared in the vernacular narratives of the eighth—ninth centuries—"transformation texts" (*bianwen* 變 文).<sup>12</sup> Later this subject was used in various dramatic and storytelling forms in China.<sup>13</sup> The popularity of this subject in the old vernacular literature is usually explained by its emphasis on the filial piety (xiao 孝), a cardinal value in Chinese society (also regarded as an attempt to reconcile Buddhist precepts with the Confucian values and concepts). The emphasis on the description of the afterlife punishment for sinners, typical of the Mulian narratives, also had important didactic and indoctrinating meanings in traditional society.

There are many common features between the printed recension of the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths* and manuscript by Li Desheng. The Li Desheng's version preserves the main storyline of the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths*, centered around three rebirths of Mulian, during which he rescues the soul of his sinful mother Liu Qingti 劉 青 提: as a son of wealthy landowner–Fu Luobo 傅蘿卜; the rebellious leader Huang Chao 黃巢 and the butcher He Yin 何因. The latter eventually converted to the way of self-perfection and thus achieved his original identity as monk Mulian. The *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths* represents the late stage of the development of this story. With the use of additional details of two new rebirths of Mulian, the original Buddhist story propagating vegetarianism and abstinence is intertwined with the historical legend about Huang Chao's rebellion (875–884) at the end of the Tang dynasty and with the propagation of ideas of syncretic religious movements at the end of the Qing period (see Berezkin 2013b). This amplification of the original Mulian story is characteristic of the texts of the system of the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths* that presumably was compiled somewhere in Jiangnan region in the middle of the nineteenth century.

There are further numerous minor details that demonstrate close relations between the *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* and the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths*. For example, both texts start with the scene that explains the origins of the Mulian's lay name: Luobo (Turnip). It says that this name was given to the child, because he was a reincarnation of an itinerant monk who received a turnip as alms from Fu Xiang 傅相, the Mulian's father. In the corpus of precious scrolls of the Qing dynasty, this detail is specific of the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths* and also brings it close to the local dramas of Zhejiang (especially city of Shaoxing 紹興), performed in the areas close to the locality where the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths* apparently was written down in the middle of the nineteenth century (Berezkin 2017, pp. 140–41). This detail demonstrates the interaction between precious scrolls and local dramas on this subject, which is also expressed in other aspects of the contents of precious scrolls (see Sections 3 and 4).

Another detail testifying to the common origins of the *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* and the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths* is the scene, where Guanyin tests the sincerity of Mulian's intentions, when he travels to the Western Heaven in search of his mother's soul. Even several poetic parts of the *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* demonstrate close proximity to the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths*. For example, it also contains an aria on repaying of ten grea<sup>t</sup> mercies of the mother, a special piece dedicated to the necessity of children's gratitude towards the mother. All these details can prove that the *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* from Zhangqiao originated in the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths*.

On the basis of this comparison one can conclude that *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* is an abbreviated adaptation of the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths*. The supposition also may be substantiated by the printed copies of the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths* discovered in possession of the masters of telling scriptures in Changshu. For example, Yu Dingjun possesses the lithographic edition of this text, printed in Shanghai in 1907. One of the performers in the Baimao district of Changshu, interviewed by Qiu Huiying, kept a xerox copy of the woodblock edition of this text, printed in Changzhou in 1886 (Qiu 2010, p. 214). One can suppose that such printed copies also were circulated in the Changshu area in the earlier period.

The version by Li Desheng also continues the original discourse of the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths*, in which didacticism and religious proselytizing is combined with the entertaining element of numerous narrative details (including some comic scenes) and well as the ritual function of the major narrative line (connected with the message of afterlife salvation for pious followers) (see Berezkin (2013b)). Still, there are some details that demonstrate modification of the original text of the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths* in the Li Desheng's version. Significantly, many details of the story have been abbreviated in the *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond*. For example, such an important episode as the interference of Liu Jia 劉假, Mulian's maternal uncle,<sup>14</sup> who persuaded Liu Qingti to break vegetarian fast and start killing animals, is only briefly mentioned in the *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond*, while it is narrated with some details in the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths*.

It is important to note that many episodes in the *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* are narrated in verses, which breaks the usual principle of repetition of the contents of prosaic parts of a precious scroll in following verses. This tendency is typical of the precious scrolls of the late period (late nineteenth–early twentieth centuries), which in general can be characterized by the developed literary qualities, such as smooth flow of narration, entertaining elements, prolonged descriptions, etc.

Many modifications of the text in the folk variant apparently were caused by copyists' mistakes. For example, in the *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* the surname of Fu Luobo and his father is written as 父, which is a borrowed character with the same pronunciation.<sup>15</sup> At the same time, there are also significant deliberate alternations in this text. For example, it says that Fu Luobu goes to the monastery and becomes a monk before his mother's death, while in the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths* he does this only after Liu Qingti's death. This detail appears similar to other precious scrolls versions of the late nineteenth century as well as several local dramas.<sup>16</sup>

Other varying details appear in the episode of Huang Chao's rebellion. While the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths* narrates in some details the story of Zhu Wen 朱溫 (852–912, historical founder of the Later Liang dynasty, 907–923),<sup>17</sup> his name does not appear in the *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond*. The *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths* says that Huang Chao after the capture of the Tang dynasty capital Chang'an was defeated by Li Cunxiao 李存孝 (?-894), the *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* mentions another famous general of the Five Dynasties period (907–960), Wang Yanzhang 王彦章 (863–923), in this episode instead. As both these military leaders are famous in Chinese history, here we apparently see the impact of different historical narratives on these two recensions of the precious scroll.

Some details of the underworld description in both texts also vary. This part has been significantly abbreviated in comparison with the standard recension of the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths*. Here, one does not find the regular scheme of description of each hell compartment, as can be seen in the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths*. This rigid scheme of alternation of prosaic passages with verses is characteristic of the precious scrolls of the early period of development and therefore can be regarded as the vestige of the original features of the genre in its late specimens.<sup>18</sup>

Still, comparatively detailed description of hells in the Li Desheng's version continues the didactic discourse of the standard version of this precious scroll. We also can find some new details there, which also hint at the use of other sources by the local storytellers. For example, in the place, where the sinners are cut by saws in two parts it is said that these are infidel widows, who in this way are punished for re-marrying. This detail is absent from the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths*, but is known in modern Chinese literature.<sup>19</sup> This detail also betrays the extremely conservative outlook of the editors of this version of the *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* that may be taken as a testimony of its comparatively early origins.

Several special features of the *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* are related to the performative context of the narrative. Needless to say, the text uses words and expressions of the local dialect, a variety of the Wu group of dialects, prevalent in southern Jiangsu.<sup>20</sup> In this way, it appears more comprehensible to the local audiences, which are constituted mainly by people with a low level of education.

The ritual function of recitation also is emphasized in this variant of precious scroll. Its ritual meaning is clearly expressed in invocations of Bodhisattva Dizang's name, who in popular beliefs is regarded as the Lord of Underworld.<sup>21</sup> The introductory verse in this text says:

Incense in the burner is burning and emits bright light,

It broadly shines in ten directions and penetrates the high vault [of heaven].

Above we invite all buddhas to arrive to our assembly,

Below we pay respect to King Dizang of the Netherworld,

He is accompanied by the guardian of law, Squire Fu,

And sage monk Mulian, who rescued his mother . . .

爐內乍熱放毫光,普照十方透上蒼。 上請諸佛來赴會,下敬幽冥地藏王。 帶領護法父員外,目蓮聖僧救娘親。 22

The text closes with the invocation of Dizang's name: "Namo Reverend Bodhisattva Dizang wang (repeat one thousand times)" 南無本尊地藏王菩薩 (Wu 2015, vol. 2, p. 1132). According to the text of the *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond*, following the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths*, Mulian and his father Fu Xiang were appointed the assistants of Dizang in the netherworld (Wu 2015, vol. 2, p. 1132). This emphasis on the connections with Dizang is especially important in the ritual context of telling scriptures, which usually also includes narratives on the previous lives of Dizang (see the next section).

Thus, the *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* can be characterized as a modified version of the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths* used in the ritualized setting of telling scriptures in several areas around Changshu.

### **3. The** *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* **in the Religious Practice of Changshu**

The emphasis on the Buddhist interpretation of the filial piety and women's salvation made precious scrolls devoted to Mulian very suitable material for recitation during funerary rites for women in Jiangnan region, where Buddhism for a long time has had a strong impact. The *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* and *Precious Scroll of Mulian* are usually regarded as two different texts that are recited for the salvation of female souls in the Changshu area.<sup>23</sup> They appear during the funerary rituals known as "[the recitation] of the *Scroll[s] of Hell*" (*Diyu juan* 地獄卷) on the occasions of funerals for the mothers of families<sup>24</sup> as well as during the so-called rituals of the "thirty-fifth [day]" (*wu qi* 五七).<sup>25</sup> In both cases, telling scriptures with the hell topics has the purpose of rescuing a human soul from the torments in hells through the means of "journey through the underworld", when the protagonist of the narratives is passing through all hells observing sufferings of sinners there.<sup>26</sup>

The *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* was recited during the assembly of the "thirty-fifth day", witnessed by Professor Che Xilun in the Gangkou area of Zhangjiagang city in 1997 (Che 2009, p. 391). I have observed recitation of both *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* and *Precious Scroll of Mulian* during the rituals of the "thirty-fifth day", performed in the very traditional mode for a deceased female relative of a young master of telling scriptures in a rural house of the Yushan 虞山 district of Changshu on 7 September 2017 (not far from the old county city of Changshu).<sup>27</sup> At the same time, the contents of the *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* used on that occasion in 2017 were completely different from the contents of the Li Desheng's version.<sup>28</sup> Though it mentioned the story of Mulian rescuing his mother, it did not have as developed narrative part as in the Li Desheng's version.<sup>29</sup>

Other narrative precious scrolls performed on these occasions in Changshu are the *Precious Scroll of Dizang* (*Dizang baojuan* 地藏寶卷), *Precious Scroll of the Earth God* (*Tudi baojuan* 土地寶卷), *Precious Scroll of the Ten Kings* (*Shi wang baojuan* 十王寶卷), and *Precious Scroll of the Penitence Rites of the Liang King* (*Liang wang fa chan baojuan* 梁王法懺寶卷; a variant of the *Precious Scroll of the Liang King*, very popular in the Wu-speaking areas of Jiangnan since the nineteenth century). While the first two are devoted to the origins of deities functioning in the underworld (considered to be deified historical figures, as is typical for Chinese popular religion); the last two (along with the *Precious Scroll of Mulian*) tell the stories of afterlife retribution and salvation.<sup>30</sup> A "telling scriptures" service for the dead also includes a number of salvation rites, which differ according to the occasion: a funeral or the "thirty-fifth day" assembly (Yu 2015, pp. 2589–93). For example, during the assembly that I witnessed in Yushan, the *Precious Scroll of Dizang* (the variant with the female rebirth of Dizang), *Precious Scroll of the Ten Kings*, *Precious Scroll of Mulian*, and *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* were recited, along with the special litanies accompanying rituals of offerings to the soul of deceased, Ten Kings of Underworld, and receiving the soul at home on the "thirty-fifth day" day (*Precious Scroll of the Five Watches* [*Wu geng baojuan* 五更寶卷]). The masters of telling scriptures also usually recite the *Scripture of the*

*Blood Pond* (*Xue hu jing* 血湖經), which makes an important addition to the *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond*. This text has the Daoist background: for example, one of its variants collected in Zhangjiagang has the complete title of the "Wondrous Scripture of Releasing from Sins in the Blood Pond of Fengdu Pronounced by the Celestial God Taiyi, Rescuing from Sufferings" (*Taiyi jiu ku tian zun shuo ba zui Fengdu Xue hu miaojing* 太乙救苦天尊 說拔罪酆都血湖妙經).<sup>31</sup> This Daoist coloring of scripture also is related to the history of the Blood Pond beliefs in China (see Section 3).<sup>32</sup> This feature also reflects the syncretic religious background of the "telling scriptures" practice in Changshu.

The *Precious Scroll of Mulian* is one of the major texts recited during funerary and memorial services for dead women.<sup>33</sup> There are multiple variants of this text in the Changshu area. The most expanded variant that I have seen is the one transmitted in the family of Yu Dingjun, titled the *Precious Scroll of Mulian Rescuing His Mother from Hell* (*Mulian jiu mu diyu baojuan* 目蓮救母地獄寶卷).<sup>34</sup> Ritual actions accompany every nineteen sections of the *Precious Scroll of Mulian*, into which the second part of the first fascicle (*juan*) of this text is divided. They describe nineteen compartments of the underworld (hells) through which Mulian passed in search of his mother, following the relevant part in the standard recension of the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths* (see Section 2). Accordingly, masters of telling scriptures kneel nineteen times and burn nineteen certificates for each compartment. Thus, they imitate the pattern of the similar ritual actions accompanying the *Precious Scroll of the Ten Kings* and *Precious Scroll of Hell* (the latter is now performed in Changshu exclusively for the deceased men, not for women).<sup>35</sup>

As attested by my observations on the site as well as interviews with the performers, recitation of the *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond* on the contrary, is not accompanied by any ritual action. Thus, it appears very dissimilar from the Daoist ritual of "breaking the Blood Pond", which is usually performed on the next day after the telling scriptures service. Unlike funerary telling scriptures, usually performed at night, the Daoist service (*daochang* 道場) takes place in the daytime, following telling scriptures.<sup>36</sup> This was the case which I witnessed on the "thirty-fifth day" occasion in Yushan in 2017. The Daoist ritual of "breaking the Blood Pond" also was performed, but it was centered on the ritual action, involving the destruction of the symbolic picture of the Blood Pond, drawn on the floor with the use of rice grain as well as the bowl representing the pond itself. The descendants of the deceased women are expected to drink some red water, which represents the mother's blood from the pond. As the emphasis here is not on the Daoist ritual, I will not describe it in detail. What is important here is its completely different form from the recitation of the relevant precious scroll in the tradition of telling scriptures. In this perspective, Daoist ritual in Changshu appears complementary to telling scriptures with the hell thematic.

Thus, the *Precious Scroll of the Blood Pond*, in the manuscript by Li Desheng, represents the combination of two ritual texts–*Precious Scroll of Mulian* and *Scripture of the Pond of Blood*–into one. Here, the story of Mulian rescuing his mother's soul from hell is used to substantiate the traditional ritual of "breaking the Blood Pond" (*po xue hu* 破血湖), still commonly performed in the traditional rural environment of Changshu. On the other hand, the emphasis here is not on the ritual action, but on the narrative component, which in the traditional environment of Changshu had entertaining aspect.<sup>37</sup>

### **4. Blood Pond Beliefs and the** *Precious Scroll of Mulian*

The concept of the "Blood Pond" that apparently developed out of the symbol of Blood Bowl in Chinese Buddhist and Daoist literature has been an important notion in the literature about Mulian since around the twelfth-thirteenth centuries. It also has been related to the ritual practice of the salvation of a female soul from afterlife sufferings.

According to Chinese popular beliefs, mainly spread at the bottom levels of traditional society (the origins of which are not clearly documented), after death women are imprisoned in the Blood{ XE "Pool of Blood" } Pond, which is formed in the underworld (Chinese equivalent of hell, or sometimes interpreted as "purgatory" in comparison with the Western beliefs){ XE "hell" } from blood they lose during childbirth and menstruation. One can find

the earliest mention of these beliefs in the Daoist ritual text dated to 1194 (Soymié 1965, p. 132). Sometimes the confinement in the Blood Pond is presented as a punishment for violation of post-partum taboos (as in the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths* and its derivatives in the scroll recitation traditions of southern Jiangsu);<sup>38</sup> however, more often it is described in the ritual texts as the inevitable consequence of female ritual impurity. It is the duty of pious descendants to perform the ritual of the salvation of their mother's soul and in this way to repay the mother's mercy of "birth and nurture of children".

These beliefs have foundation in the Buddhist notions of the physiological impurity of a woman's body as well as in the principle of one's filial duty towards one's mother (Cole 1998, pp. 197–214). They also are propagated in the *Blood Bowl Sutra of the True Teaching ¯ in Great Canon Pronounced by the Buddha* (*Foshuo Dazang zhengjiao Xue pen jing* 佛 說 大 藏 正 教 血 盆 經, hereafter *Blood Bowl Sutra ¯* ), a short Chinese scripture of the unknown date (ca. the twelfth century). It belongs to the category of indigenous (or apocryphal) Buddhist scriptures that though generally were not credited by elite monastics still constituted an important aspect of functioning of Chinese Buddhism (see, e.g., Buswell (1990)). In this case, the *Blood Bowl Sutra ¯* serves the scriptural foundation of a popular ritual practice. Another important aspect of this text in connection with the later precious scrolls with the Mulian subject is that it explicitly refers to the story of Mulian rescuing his mother from the Blood Pond (*Xue pen jing* 1967, p. 414). Therefore, filial children perform rituals of their mother's salvation from the Blood Pond, following the example of Mulian.

The elaboration of the Mulian story with the inclusion of the Blood Pond mythology became the core of the Buddhist ritual practice of salvation of ancestors, in this case specifically females. Since the early period (twelfth–thirteenth century) the rituals of the Blood Pond were also used in the Daoist tradition (Soymié 1965, pp. 132–33). The earliest mention of the Blood Pond and the ritual assembly aimed at the salvation from it in the precious scrolls dates back to the second half of the fourteenth century. It appears in the *Precious Scroll of Mulian Rescuing His Mother [and Helping Her]* to *Escape from Hell and Be Born in Heaven* (*Mulian jiu mu chuli diyu sheng tian baojuan* 目 連 救 母 出 離 地 獄 生 天 寶 卷, also abbreviated as the *Precious Scroll of Mulian*), which is considered to be the earliest specimen of precious scrolls that survives now.<sup>39</sup> This text mentions the Victorious Meeting of the Blood Bowl of Ullambana (*Xue pen Yulan sheng hui* 血盆盂 蘭 勝 會), which helped Mulian to rescue his mother from the rebirth as a dog (after she had already escaped from the imprisonment in hell and rebirth in the form of a hungry ghost): 40

The World Honored One said: If [you want] your mother to escape the dog's body, you should select the day of Zhongyuan festival on the fifteenth day of the seventh month and hold the Victorious Meeting of the Blood Bowl of Ullambana on this day, organize the ritual assembly. Only then your mother will be able to leave the dog's body and be reborn on the higher path" 世 尊 說:若 你 母 脫 離 狗 體,揀 七 月 十 五 日 中 元 節。今 日 修 設 血盆盂 蘭 勝 會,啟 建 道 場。汝 母 纔 得 脫 狗 超 昇。(Yoshikawa 2003, p. 131).

In this passage, the ritual Meeting of the Blood Bowl is combined with the Ullambana assembly, an important Buddhist festival around which the ritual concerning Mulian and his mother originally developed in the sixth–ninth centuries (see Teiser (1988); Wang (2010)).

The practice of recitation of the *Sutra of the Blood Bowl ¯* (and similar texts) during special rituals for the redemption of the sins of women still living (as well as during funerals) is mentioned in the literature of the sixteenth–seventeenth centuries (Wang 2010, pp. 261–63). The Blood Pond as one of the hell compartments also appears in the act "Looking for Mother in the Third Hall" (*Sandian xunmu* 三 殿 尋 母) of the *Newly Compiled Drama Exhorting Goodness of Mulian Rescuing His Mother* (*Xinbian Mulian jiumu quanshan xiwen* 新 編 目 連 救 母 勸 善 戲 文) compiled by the Anhui literatus Zheng Zhizhen 鄭 之 珍 (1518–1595) on the basis of earlier recensions of this drama (first printed ca. 1582).<sup>41</sup> Expanded versions of the Blood Bowl scriptures from the later period (Ming and Qing dynasties) usually have the form of

"penitence books" (*chanfa* 懺 法) and serve the direct function of cleansing all woman's sins. Several texts of penitence books that deal with the salvation from the Blood Pond (one of them dated to the end of the Ming dynasty) that are very close in contents and form to precious scrolls have survived.<sup>42</sup> They continue to circulate in the modern period: a text of one of such penitence books, the *Precious Penitence of the Merciful Blood Bowl* (*Cibei Xue pen bao chan* 慈 悲 血 盆 寶 懺) has been printed in Taiwan until now. As was mentioned above, the ritual text of such form also was collected from performers in Changshu.

Besides, the symbol of the Blood Pond also was incorporated in the ritual systems of the sectarian teachings of the sixteenth – seventeenth centuries and appears in precious scrolls compiled by their followers. An example is the *Precious Scroll of Reverend Maudgalyayana Rescuing His Mother [and Helping Her] to Escape from Hell and Be Born in ¯ Heaven* (*Mulian jiu mu chuli diyu sheng tian baojuan* 目 犍 連 尊 者 救 母 出 離 地 獄 生 天 寶 卷), which most probably is an adaptation of the early *Precious Scroll of Mulian* (1373 manuscript) by the followers of the Teaching of Non-Interference (*Wuwei jiao* 無 為 教) in the sixteenth or seventeenth century. It has a special section on the Hell of the Pool of Blood (*Xue hu diyu* 血 湖 地 獄, no. 55).<sup>43</sup> Several sectarian groups employed the rituals of salvation from the Blood Pond in the propagation of their teachings.<sup>44</sup> For example, there is a scripture of the Teaching of Vast Yang (Hongyang jiao 弘 陽 教) with the title of the *Precious Penitence on the Blood Pond of the Vast Yang of Chaotic Origin* (*Hunyuan hongyang xue hu bao chan* 混元弘 陽 血 湖 寳 懺) dating back to the late sixteenth or early seventeenth century that explains the origins of the Blood Pond and the ways to escape from it. It tells that in 1594 patriarch Piaogao 飄 高 (original name Han Taihu 韓 太 湖, 1570–1598), the founder of Teaching of Vast Yang, established the Glorious Assembly of the Blood Pond (*Xue hu sheng hui* 血 湖 勝 會) in response to requests of his followers (Pu 2005, vol. 106, pp. 117–18).

At the same time, the ritual of the salvation of deceased women from the suffering in the Blood Pond makes an important part of the ritual practice of common folk in China until now. In many places of southern China (including the island of Taiwan), this ritual has been performed together with the dramatic pieces on Mulian (see, e.g., Seaman (1989); Duan (1999, pp. 152–60); Wang (2010, pp. 164–66, 181–82)). The Blood Pond also is often mentioned in the precious scrolls of the nineteenth century, including the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirth of Mulian*, which also can be related to the contemporary ritual practice in the southern part of Jiangsu (see Berezkin (2017, pp. 163–67)).

The episode with the Blood Pond plays an important role in the recension of Li Desheng, following the original text of the *Precious Scroll of Three Rebirths*. In this episode when Ms. Liu is brought to the Blood Pond after death, the verse says:

Women who came before you will tell you, listen [to us]!

While alive, we gave birth to sons and daughters and thus committed grave sins.

Before the completion of the full month, we passed in front of the [family] hall,

And thus insulted the god of hall and six deities of the household.

Before the completion of the full month, we passed through the skywell, 45

And thus insulted the three lights of sun, moon, and stars.

As soon as Ms. Liu heard about these sins,

She wailed and cried, enduring these torments.


却 來 滿 月 天井過, 觸 犯 三 光 日 月 星。

劉 氏 一 聽 如此罪, 啼啼哭哭 受 災 辛。 46

Then women in the Pond address their sons and daughters, asking them to perform offerings to Yan-wang (King Yama),<sup>47</sup> so that he can forgive their sins (Wu 2015, vol. 2, p. 1119). In this way the topic of the salvation from the Blood Pond is fully revealed in the recension of Li Desheng.

Thus, the association of the Mulian narrative with the rituals of the Blood Pond can be traced back to the late imperial period and appears in the forms of ritualized storytelling (scroll recitation) as well as the ritual drama. It can explain the survival and development of scroll recitation with this subject in the modern period, despite general decay of precious scrolls and persecutions of their recitation in the second half of the twentieth century.
