Tan Sitong's summary execution at the close of the
Hundred Days Reform (1898) inadvertently threw his
wife, Li Run, into the public limelight. Following
the September coup, the Guowen bao
(National News) in Tianjin carried a story, entitled
“Tan liefu zhuan” (Biography of the virtuous woman
Tan), in which Li allegedly committed suicide by
slashing her throat on learning of her husband's
fate. She died broken-hearted, it was said, in
protest against the wicked court ministers
responsible for Tan's death. The story was quickly
reprinted in Qingyi bao (The China
Discussion), a periodical which Liang Qichao, a
reformer in exile, started in Yokohama, Japan, as
one prong of his anti-Qing campaign. The report on
Li's demise continued to circulate. Twenty years
later, when the Chinese scholar, Yi Zhongkui,
compiled his Xin shishuo (Sequel to
New Account of Tales of the
World), he included a short biography of Li
Run, based on the Guowen bao
account. More recently, in her Chinese Women
in a Century of Revolution 1850–1950, Ono
Kazuko refers to the suicide story and wisely
cautions about its veracity. But she adduces no
evidence to confirm what actually did happen to Li
Run in 1898.