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Two birds flying high,
A Chinese vessel, sailing by.
A bridge with three men, sometimes four,
A willow tree, hanging o'er.
A Chinese temple, there it stands,
Built upon the river sands.
An apple tree, with apples on,
A crooked fence to end my song.
As one of the most renowned and fascinating of romantic fables,
with its Shakespearean overtones of doomed love and tragedy, the
Willow Pattern story is universally familiar. This timeless tale
of star-crossed lovers appeals to the imagination whilst the intricate
and decorative Willow Pattern itself has been hugely popular for
centuries.
This instantly recognisable pattern is a classic Chinese landscape
design, the fundamentals of which include a weeping willow, pagodas,
a crooked fence, a tree bearing fruit, three or four figures on
a bridge, a boat and a pair of lovebirds forever kissing. Combining
these elements, the long-established and poignant saga is revealed.
In
a bygone age a wealthy and powerful Mandarin of the Chinese Empire
lived with his lovely daughter Knoon-se in a grand palace surrounded
by ornate, exotic flowers and trees. Chang, a low born but intelligent
and personable young man, was employed as secretary to the Mandarin
and fell hopelessly in love with the exquisite and captivating
Knoon-se. Reciprocating his affections, Knoon-se met with Chang
each evening beneath a weeping willow tree by the river.
The Mandarin learned of their trysts and, infuriated that
his adored daughter had fallen in love with a commoner, dismissed
Chang, banning him from the estate, while Knoon-se was imprisoned
in a pavilion overlooking the river. He surrounded the palace
grounds with a crooked fence and, against her wishes, arranged
for Knoon-se to marry the warrior Duke Ta-jin. With no company
apart from servants, Knoon-se befriended and fed many birds and,
knowing that her wedding
would take place once the fruit tree outside her window was in
bloom, she stared desolately into the river, contemplating her
isolation and despairing of her future without Chang.
The devoted Chang, unaware of Knoon-se's approaching nuptials,
also cared for and spoke with birds while dreaming of ways to contact
his lost love. [Here, versions of the legend differ; as some say
that] Chang sent a message to his beloved by fixing a sail to a
shell and floating it down the river bearing a love poem, "As
this boat sails to thee, so my thoughts tend", which Knoon-se
scooped from the river with her parasol. Her spirits lifted as she
read his words and knew that Chang would come for her. During the
hours of darkness she replied unseen, adding a burning incense stick
to the shell and warning Chang to "Gather thy blossom, 'ere
it be stolen". Knoon-se watched the tiny light until it
disappeared downstream and prayed for rescue. [Other versions claim
that the lovesick couple communicated using their feathered friends
as go-betweens.]
The
tree was heavy with bud and near to blossom as the Duke Ta-jin
arrived amid great fanfare, accompanied by a huge retinue of servants.
He presented his betrothed Knoon-se with a casket of rare and
priceless jewels, but she could think of none other than Chang
and gazed at her unwanted future husband with a heart of stone,
her eyes dull with despair.
Nights of celebration and sumptuous banquets followed. Chang
entered the palace grounds disguised as a servant and glimpsed
the Mandarin and Duke through a window, both sated and asleep.
Seizing the moment,
he crept to the riverside apartment where Knoon-se languished
alone. The lovers embraced with tears of joy and, pausing only
to grab the casket of jewels, fled across the bridge to a boat
that Chang had moored nearby in readiness.
Alas,
a slight noise alerted the Mandarin and he gave chase.
[At the height of this daring adventure, the Willow Pattern depicts
Knoon-se on the bridge holding the Staff of Virginity, followed
by Chang bearing the box of jewels with the Mandarin in hot pursuit,
brandishing a whip. When the fourth figure is shown in the Willow
Pattern this represents the Duke, desperate to recapture his fleeing
bride-to-be and her lover.]
Knoon-se
and Chang sailed to a faraway land where they sold the jewels
to purchase a small pagoda and lived in bliss, sharing the life
they had yearned for through many seasons. [The Willow Pattern
shows their distant pagoda surrounded by lush foliage.]
In a fit of vengeful spite, the Mandarin captured and caged
all the birds in his gardens, as birdsong was anathema to his
ears. Relentlessly he and the Duke sent spies and warriors on
long and unsuccessful quests to find the couple. Ultimately the
brooding Mandarin, obsessed by his lost daughter and thwarted
at every turn, chanced upon a possible solution. He released all
the birds and ordered his men to follow them as they flew away.
The devoted birds, who had never forgotten Knoon-se or Chang,
unwittingly led the evil army straight to their far off dwelling.
At the dead of night, murderous men surrounded the pagoda,
setting it alight as Knoon-se and Chang slept. Tragically, the
lovers perished in the flames. Revenge and bitterness had seemingly
prevailed as the fire raged and engulfed all.
Cosmic winds howled as the ever-watchful gods took pity on
the doomed lovers and blessed their undying devotion by granting
them immortality. From the charred ruins of their home, the souls
of Knoon-se and Chang soared into the sky as turtledoves and kissed
again; beyond fear, beyond danger, forever free and symbolising
eternal love.
The Legend of the Willow Pattern - as we know it - may have little
substance as an ancient Chinese fable. An expert in Chinese History
at Murdoch University in Western Australia suggests that the essence
and outcome of our familiar version is at odds with imperial Chinese
ethics and social order of the past. Differences of perception
between East and West are illustrated here; as a similar Chinese
allegory would be a cautionary tale of stupidity and deception
- because Knoon-se disobeyed her father's wishes. Thus, the classic
Chinese concept would be that the lovers' punishment was to see
each other as mere birds for eternity, everlastingly tormented
for their sins. By contrast, the ethos of our Western version
is that love conquers all.
From behind the story of the Willow Pattern emerges a vivid kaleidoscope
of history spanning several centuries. Graceful clipper ships
(such as the Cutty Sark) sailed the high seas transporting precious
cargo, great wars were fought and sinister plots hatched as merchants
and banks grew rich on the profits of trade and exploitation.
Ultimately, however, it all boils down to a cup of tea; for the
drinking of tea was how it began and some argue that tea was the
catalyst for the expansion of the British Empire.
The
Chinese discovered the merits of drinking Tchai - infusions of
tealeaves - in ancient times, and it was only in the early 17th
century that intrepid Dutch and Portuguese voyagers explored the
Far East and brought Oriental novelties, including tealeaves,
home to Europe. Half a century later, in 1662, Charles II married
the Portuguese Catherine of Braganza who introduced tea to the
Royal Court. Imbibing tea was found to be uplifting to the spirits
and in no time this pleasant brew became the height of fashion.
Intellectuals would meet for discussions over a cup of tea and
high society followed, adopting elaborate social rituals of tea
drinking with attendant paraphernalia and affectation.
Conversely, this genteel pastime disguised a cynical agenda as
the British East India Company traded opium produced in colonised
India with China in exchange for tea, making fortunes as the "middle
man", culminating in the disastrous Opium Wars of 1839-42.
John Barrow wrote in the Quarterly Magazine of 1836: "
it is a curious circumstance that we grow poppy in our Indian
territories to poison the people of China in return for a wholesome
beverage which they prepare almost exclusively for us". Across
the Atlantic, rebellion against taxes levied on tea ultimately
led to the furious demonstration known as the "Boston Tea
Party", sowing the seeds of the American War of Independence.
So widespread was British passion for tea that it became a precious,
glorified (and very overrated) commodity and, as such, a potent
emblem of wealth and status - the hyping of which was encouraged
to increase revenue. Early tea caddies, although proudly and prominently
displayed, were universally fitted with locks and keys in order
to deter butlers or maids from pilfering the treasured contents.
Simultaneously, a countrywide vogue for Chinoiserie flourished.
To meet the ever-growing demand, the Chinese obligingly manufactured
decorative porcelain services in traditional patterns, for bulk
export to Britain along with the tea. Soon oriental tea services
bearing typical elaborate, yet naïve patterns were de rigueur;
but what to do if part of a valued Canton tea or dinner set was
broken? Such an event was calamitous, as pieces were virtually
irreplaceable, unless one was prepared to wait up to three whole
years for an order to return from China. Faced with the unthinkable
prospect of social humiliation, desperate society housewives turned
to local potteries in the hope that they could replace matching
pieces.
Pair of Wilton Ware pot pourris and Carlton Ware Kang Hsi NANKIN
tea caddy
Some may be surprised to learn that our well-known rendition
of the Willow Legend was invented by British porcelain manufacturers
only around two hundred years ago as a clever promotional tool
for the marketing of chinoise tableware. Thomas Turner at the
Caughley works, Shropshire was the first to reproduce blue over
white Chinese Nankin patterns on British porcelain in 1779. Other
potters swiftly followed, such as Thomas Minton, but it is believed
to be Josiah Spode who, inspired by various Chinese porcelain
designs, developed the Willow Pattern in 1790.

Caughley Nankin Willow plate c.1870 and Spode Willow Pattern
plate
There is apparently no Chinese design which contains all the
features of the standard Willow Pattern; and it is also interesting
to note that some early British versions of Chinese ceramic art
were reproduced in pastel blues on white, as designers believed
these pallid hues were the original colour scheme. Chinese patterns
were, however, hand-painted while English versions were usually
transfer-printed. In fact, exported blue over white Chinese porcelain
was often faded due to being stored below in the ship's bilge
where it was subjected en voyage to the ravages of salt water,
whereas the prized cargo of tea was secured safely above in the
hold.
World
expert on the Willow Pattern, Robert Copeland, reported that,
during excavations at the Spode factory site in the 1970s, shards
of Chinese pearlware porcelain were discovered, incorporated into
the foundations of a wall. These shards depicted typical pagodas,
trees and other elements of the [later] Willow Pattern, - adding
substance to the claim that Josiah Spode borrowed features from
not only "Mandarin" but "Forest Landscape"
and other available Canton ware to create this unique panorama.
Fascination with the pattern and the story continued as people
sought to read further significance into features of the scene.
For instance, in his seminal article on the Willow Pattern for the
now defunct "Antiques Collector" magazine, Copeland stated
that, "Counting the oranges [or apples or pears
- depending on which account one reads] on the trees is fruitless
too (!) The size of the tree and so the number of oranges will vary
according to the size of the item, while two engravers working at
different times for the same manufacturer may introduce variations
of detail like this."
A century or so later Carlton Ware produced the first of its known
WILLOW designs; a delightful Flow Blue version shown here
on a small vessel.

Carlton Ware Flow Blue WILLOW tiny vessel
During the Roaring Twenties, Carlton Ware typically defied convention
by launching WILLOW in bright enamelled colours on white
(2041), as well as on shimmering grounds of gilded orange
(2841), red (2851) or pale blue (2352) lustre.
Contemporary potteries continued the tradition, producing fine examples
such as Crown Devon's luminous Devon Lustrine version and its later
design, "Pagoda".

Carlton Ware WILLOW on white, orange lustre and pale blue lustre

Pair of Crown Devon Lustrine Willow Pattern bowls and Chinese
Panel vase
Throughout half a century, Carlton Ware variously incorporated
rudiments of the Willow Pattern into specific designs such as "MIKADO"
and "NEW MIKADO", "TEMPLE", "BARGE",
"CHINESE TEA GARDEN", "CHINESE FIGURES"
and "Mandarins Chatting"; for example "MIKADO"
invariably includes a pair of kissing birds. In the 1950s, Carlton
Ware designers reverted to a more traditional stance by offering
an adaptation drawn in simple blue, green or maroon on white ground,
no less attractive than its predecessors.

Carlton Ware WILLOW 1950's ginger jar in green and blue on white
Reflecting the optimism of a new century, potteries such as Carlton
Ware, Crown Devon and Wedgwood enhanced this time-honoured landscape
with an up-to-date flamboyance, celebrating the historic Willow
Pattern whilst respectfully preserving its spirit or chi.

Crown Devon Pagoda and Carlton Ware WILLOW
Few chinoise ceramic designs can be more charming than a fine
specimen of legendary Willow Pattern, while its romantic story
lingers in public consciousness and continues to enchant.

Carlton Ware MIKADO spill vase, Carlton Ware Flow Blue WILLOW
vessel
Crown Devon Pagoda vase & Carlton Ware WILLOW jug
With grateful thanks to Aileen Kearns, Desmond
Guilfoyle, Harvey Pettit, Ian Harwood and Jerome Wilson for advice
and inspiration
Photos of Carlton Ware WILLOW courtesy of Czes & Yvonne Kosnoiwski
at www.carltonware.com
Photos of Crown Devon pieces courtesy of Desmond Guilfoyle from
his collection
Photos of Carlton Ware Flow Blue vessel courtesy of Lynn Topaz
Group photos of various pieces by Diana Kearns from her collection
First published in the Carlton Ware Newsletter #24 by Ian Harwood
& JeromeWilson, September 2005
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