The Tears Were Real
Liu Bei wept. That’s the first thing to know. He wept so frequently and so publicly that weeping became his defining political tool. But the tears — by every account in the historical record and the Romance of the Three Kingdoms — were sincere. Or at least, sincerely performed. The distinction may not matter. The tears brought warriors to his side when armies couldn’t.
His voice was emotional and carrying. Not a thundering general’s command. A leader whose genuine emotion drew extraordinary men to follow him. Guan Yu and Zhang Fei didn’t swear brotherhood with Liu Bei in the Peach Garden because he was the strongest. They swore because he believed in righteousness so completely that his voice made it sound like something worth dying for.
A Provincial Claim to Imperial Blood
Late Han Dynasty Chinese. The language of the collapsing Eastern Han Dynasty, significantly different from modern Mandarin. His regional accent would have marked him as a man of Zhuo commandery — modern Hebei province — provincial, rough-edged, but claiming imperial blood. Whether the blood claim was true remains debated.
The Peach Garden Oath
“The brotherhood sworn in the peach garden — to live and die together — this is more sacred than any throne.” The Oath of the Peach Garden. The foundational myth of loyalty in Chinese culture.
“The ruler is not the one who wields the sword. The ruler is the one who wields the heart.” The emotional voice delivering the emotional argument for power. Not strength. Not strategy. Sincerity.
The Deathbed at Baidicheng
It is 221 CE. Liu Bei has just declared himself Emperor of Shu Han in Chengdu. The Han dynasty has been usurped by Cao Pi. Liu Bei claims to be its rightful continuation — a sandal-weaving commoner who traced his lineage to the imperial house. Guan Yu, his sworn brother, has been killed by the kingdom of Wu. Liu Bei burns for revenge. His voice addresses the court with grief and fury: they must invade Wu. His advisors — including the brilliant Zhuge Liang — urge caution. Liu Bei overrules them. The invasion will fail catastrophically at the Battle of Yiling. Liu Bei will die at Baidicheng, entrusting his young son to Zhuge Liang with the words: “If my son is worthy, assist him. If not, take the throne yourself.” He wept when he said it. Zhuge Liang wept when he heard it. The kingdom lasted 42 more years. The tears were real. They always were.
The Record
- Chen Shou. Records of the Three Kingdoms (Sanguozhi). 3rd century CE.
- Luo Guanzhong. Romance of the Three Kingdoms. 14th century.
- de Crespigny, Rafe. A Biographical Dictionary of Later Han to the Three Kingdoms. Brill, 2007.
- Moss Roberts (translator). Three Kingdoms. University of California Press, 1991.