Although the original version has been lost, the general content of
Liu Wenlong and the Water-chestnut Mirror is still known to a degree. A comparison of the roles and plot make it clear that the Zhuang version is adapted from this lost opera-play. Since there is no record of when its transition from Chinese took place, it is assumed to have happened from the Song dynasty onwards, most likely during the Ming dynasty. It has been preserved in written form using the traditional Zhuang writing system,
Sawndip since the Ming or Qing dynasties. Although their lengths vary, most of the Sawndip manuscripts are about 500 lines long. Some versions have five characters per line and others seven characters per line.
Synopsis The story is sometimes set in the
Tang dynasty. In his teens, Wenlong marries Lanshi, an arrangement by his parents. Both are intelligent and good looking. The young couple love each other very much. Because Wenlong is so bright, he is ordered by the Emperor to go to the capital to become an official. When they say goodbye, as a reminder to be faithful, the couple split a metal mirror in two, and Lanshi gives Wenlong one of a pair of shoes she has made herself and keeps the other. They are apart for many years but remain faithful to each other. Whilst Wenlong gone, Wenzong tries to court the beautiful Lanshi to become his wife. He even says that Wenlong must be dead, but Lanshi refuses to marry him. Unable to convince Lanshi, Wenzong talks to her parents and eventually convinces them to agree, because Wenlong has been gone for 15 years. A wedding date is fixed for a few days' time. Wenlong has a vivid dream of his home and the next day sets out from the capital to return there. The story ends with the return of Wenlong on the day of Wenzong and Lanshi's wedding. Wenlong, nearing his home town, meets a woman crying by the river, and talking to her discovers she is his wife. Wenlong has the shoe made by his wife many years before and his wife then fetches the other shoe which she has kept safe for many years. They are re-united and happy at last. (In some versions there is a longer ending recounting how Wenlong and Wenzong fight and ending with Wenzong being justly beheaded.) ==Modern Chinese opera versions==