THE GREAT BELL (A Children's Story)


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  1. The mighty Yung-lo sat on the great throne surrounded by a hundred
  2. attendants. He was sad, for he could think of no wonderful thing to do
  3. for his country. He flirted his silken fan nervously and snapped his
  4. long finger-nails in the impatience of despair.
  5. "Woe is me!" he cried at last, his sorrow getting the better of his
  6. usual calmness. "I have picked up the great capital and moved it from
  7. the South to Peking and have built here a mighty city. I have surrounded
  8. my city with a wall, even thicker and greater than the famous wall of
  9. China. I have constructed in this city scores of temples and palaces.
  10. I have had the wise men and scholars compile a great book of wisdom,
  11. made up of 23,000 volumes, the largest and most wonderful collection
  12. of learning ever gathered together by the hands of men. I have built
  13. watch-towers, bridges, and giant monuments, and now, alas! as I approach
  14. the end of my days as ruler of the Middle Kingdom there is nothing more
  15. to be done for my people. Better far that I should even now close my
  16. tired eyes for ever and mount up on high to be the guest of the dragon,
  17. than live on in idleness, giving to my children an example of
  18. uselessness and sloth."
  19. "But, your Majesty," began one of Yung-lo's most faithful courtiers,
  20. named Ming-lin, falling upon his knees and knocking his head three times
  21. on the ground, "if you would only deign to listen to your humble slave,
  22. I would dare to suggest a great gift for which the many people of
  23. Peking, your children, would rise up and bless you both now and in
  24. future generations."
  25. "Only tell me of such a gift and I will not only grant it to the
  26. imperial city, but as a sign of thanksgiving to you for your sage
  27. counsel I will bestow upon you the royal peacock feather."
  28. "It is not for one of my small virtues," replied the delighted official,
  29. "to wear the feather when others so much wiser are denied it, but if it
  30. please your Majesty, remember that in the northern district of the city
  31. there has been erected a bell-tower which as yet remains empty. The
  32. people of the city need a giant bell to sound out the fleeting hours of
  33. the day, that they may be urged on to perform their labours and not be
  34. idle. The water-clock already marks the hours, but there is no bell to
  35. proclaim them to the populace."
  36. "A good suggestion in sooth," answered the Emperor, smiling, "and yet
  37. who is there among us that has skill enough in bell-craft to do the task
  38. you propose? I am told that to cast a bell worthy of our imperial city
  39. requires the genius of a poet and the skill of an astronomer."
  40. "True, most mighty one, and yet permit me to say that Kwan-yu, who so
  41. skilfully moulded the imperial cannon, can also cast a giant bell. He
  42. alone of all your subjects is worthy of the task, for he alone can do
  43. it justice."
  44. Now, the official who proposed the name of Kwan-yu to the Emperor had
  45. two objects in so doing. He wished to quiet the grief of Yung-lo, who
  46. was mourning because he had nothing left to do for his people, and,
  47. at the same time, to raise Kwan-yu to high rank, for Kwan-yu's only
  48. daughter had for several years been betrothed to Ming-lin's only
  49. son, and it would be a great stroke of luck for Ming-lin if his
  50. daughter-in-law's father should come under direct favour of the Emperor.
  51. "Depend upon it, Kwan-yu can do the work better than any other man
  52. within the length and breadth of your empire," continued Ming-lin, again
  53. bowing low three times.
  54. "Then summon Kwan-yu at once to my presence, that I may confer with him
  55. about this important business."
  56. In great glee Ming-lin arose and backed himself away from the golden
  57. throne, for it would have been very improper for him to turn his
  58. coat-tails on the Son of Heaven.
  59. But it was with no little fear that Kwan-yu undertook the casting of the
  60. great bell.
  61. "Can a carpenter make shoes?" he had protested, when Ming-lin had broken
  62. the Emperor's message to him.
  63. "Yes," replied the other quickly, "if they be like those worn by the
  64. little island dwarfs, and, therefore, made of wood. Bells and cannon are
  65. cast from similar material. You ought easily to adapt yourself to this
  66. new work."
  67. Now when Kwan-yu's daughter found out what he was about to undertake,
  68. she was filled with a great fear.
  69. "Oh, honoured father," she cried, "think well before you give this
  70. promise. As a cannon-maker you are successful, but who can say about the
  71. other task? And if you fail, the Great One's wrath will fall heavily
  72. upon you."
  73. "Just hear the girl," interrupted the ambitious mother. "What do you
  74. know about success and failure? You'd better stick to the subject of
  75. cooking and baby-clothes, for you will soon be married. As for your
  76. father, pray let him attend to his own business. It is unseemly for
  77. a girl to meddle in her father's affairs."
  78. And so poor Ko-ai--for that was the maiden's name--was silenced, and
  79. went back to her fancy-work with a big tear stealing down her fair
  80. cheek, for she loved her father dearly and there had come into her heart
  81. a strange terror at thought of his possible danger.
  82. Meanwhile, Kwan-yu was summoned to the Forbidden City, which is in the
  83. centre of Peking, and in which stands the Imperial palace. There he
  84. received his instructions from the Son of Heaven.
  85. "And remember," said Yung-lo in conclusion, "this bell must be so great
  86. that the sound of it will ring out to a distance of thirty-three miles
  87. on every hand. To this end, you should add in proper proportions gold
  88. and brass, for they give depth and strength to everything with which
  89. they mingle. Furthermore, in order that this giant may not be lacking in
  90. the quality of sweetness, you must add silver in due proportion, while
  91. the sayings of the sages must be graven on its sides."
  92. Now when Kwan-yu had really received his commission from the
  93. Emperor he searched the bookstalls of the city to find if possible
  94. some ancient descriptions of the best methods used in bell-casting. Also
  95. he offered generous wages to all who had ever had experience in the
  96. great work for which he was preparing. Soon his great foundry was alive
  97. with labourers; huge fires were burning; great piles of gold, silver and
  98. other metals were lying here and there, ready to be weighed.
  99. Whenever Kwan-yu went out to a public tea-house all of his friends plied
  100. him with questions about the great bell.
  101. "Will it be the largest in the world?"
  102. "Oh, no," he would reply, "that is not necessary, but it must be the
  103. sweetest-toned, for we Chinese strive not for size, but for purity; not
  104. for greatness, but for virtue."
  105. "When will it be finished?"
  106. "Only the gods can tell, for I have had little experience, and perhaps I
  107. shall fail to mix the metals properly."
  108. Every few days the Son of Heaven himself would send an imperial
  109. messenger to ask similar questions, for a king is likely to be just as
  110. curious as his subjects, but Kwan-yu would always modestly reply that he
  111. could not be certain; it was very doubtful when the bell would be ready.
  112. At last, however, after consulting an astrologer, Kwan-yu appointed
  113. a day for the casting, and then there came another courtier robed in
  114. splendid garments, saying that at the proper hour the Great One himself
  115. would for the first time cross Kwan-yu's threshold--would come to see
  116. the casting of the bell he had ordered for his people. On hearing this,
  117. Kwan-yu was sore afraid, for he felt that somehow, in spite of all his
  118. reading, in spite of all the advice he had received from well-wishers,
  119. there was something lacking in the mixture of the boiling metals that
  120. would soon be poured into the giant mould. In short, Kwan-yu was about
  121. to discover an important truth that this great world has been thousands
  122. of years in learning--namely, that mere reading and advice cannot
  123. produce skill, that true skill can come only from years of experience
  124. and practice. On the brink of despair, he sent a servant with money to
  125. the temple, to pray to the gods for success in his venture. Truly,
  126. despair and prayer rhyme in every language.
  127. Ko-ai, his daughter, was also afraid when she saw the cloud on her
  128. father's brow, for she it was, you remember, who had tried to prevent
  129. him from undertaking the Emperor's commission. She also went to the
  130. temple, in company with a faithful old servant, and prayed to heaven.
  131. The great day dawned. The Emperor and his courtiers were assembled, the
  132. former sitting on a platform built for the occasion. Three attendants
  133. waved beautiful hand-painted fans about his imperial brow, for the room
  134. was very warm, and a huge block of ice lay melting in a bowl of carved
  135. brass, cooling the hot air before it should blow upon the head of the
  136. Son of Heaven.
  137. Kwan-yu's wife and daughter stood in a corner at the back of the room,
  138. peering anxiously towards the cauldron of molten liquid, for well they
  139. knew that Kwan-yu's future rank and power depended on the success of
  140. this enterprise. Around the walls stood Kwan-yu's friends, and at the
  141. windows groups of excited servants strained their necks, trying to catch
  142. a glimpse of royalty, and for once afraid to chatter. Kwan-yu himself
  143. was hurrying hither and thither, now giving a final order, now gazing
  144. anxiously at the empty mould, and again glancing towards the throne to
  145. see if his imperial master was showing signs of impatience.
  146. At last all was ready; everyone was waiting breathlessly for the sign
  147. from Yung-lo which should start the flowing of the metal. A slight bow
  148. of the head, a lifting of the finger! The glowing liquid, hissing with
  149. delight at being freed even for a moment from its prison, ran forward
  150. faster and faster along the channel that led into the great earthen bed.
  151. The bell-maker covered his eyes with his fan, afraid to look at the
  152. swiftly-flowing stream. Were all his hopes to be suddenly dashed by the
  153. failure of the metals to mix and harden properly? A heavy sigh escaped
  154. him as at last he looked up at the thing he had created. Something had
  155. indeed gone wrong; he knew in the flash of an eye that misfortune had
  156. overtaken him.
  157. Yes! sure enough, when at last the earthen casting had been broken, even
  158. the smallest child could see that the giant bell, instead of being a
  159. thing of beauty was a sorry mass of metals that would not blend.
  160. "Alas!" said Yung-lo, "here is indeed a mighty failure, but even in this
  161. disappointment I see an object lesson well worthy of consideration, for
  162. behold! in yonder elements are all the materials of which this country
  163. is made up. There are gold and silver and the baser metals. United in
  164. the proper manner they would make a bell so wonderfully beautiful and so
  165. pure of tone that the very spirits of the Western heavens would pause to
  166. look and listen. But divided they form a thing that is hideous to eye
  167. and ear. Oh, my China! how many wars are there from time to time among
  168. the different sections, weakening the country and making it poor! If
  169. only all these peoples, great and small, the gold and silver and the
  170. baser elements, would unite, then would this land be really worthy of
  171. the name of the Middle Kingdom!"
  172. The courtiers all applauded this speech of the great Yung-lo, but
  173. Kwan-yu remained on the ground where he had thrown himself at the feet
  174. of his sovereign. Still bowing his head and moaning, he cried out:
  175. "Ah! your Majesty! I urged you not to appoint me, and now indeed you see
  176. my unfitness. Take my life, I beg you, as a punishment for my failure."
  177. "Rise, Kwan-yu," said the great Prince. "I would be a mean master indeed
  178. if I did not grant you another trial. Rise up and see that your next
  179. casting profits by the lesson of this failure."
  180. So Kwan-yu arose, for when the King speaks, all men must listen. The
  181. next day he began his task once more, but still his heart was heavy,
  182. for he knew not the reason of his failure and was therefore unable to
  183. correct his error. For many months he laboured night and day. Hardly a
  184. word would he speak to his wife, and when his daughter tried to tempt
  185. him with a dish of sunflower seed that she had parched herself, he would
  186. reward her with a sad smile, but would by no means laugh with her and
  187. joke as had formerly been his custom. On the first and fifteenth day of
  188. every moon he went himself to the temple and implored the gods to grant
  189. him their friendly assistance, while Ko-ai added her prayers to his,
  190. burning incense and weeping before the grinning idols.
  191. Again the great Yung-lo was seated on the platform in Kwan-yu's foundry,
  192. and again his courtiers hovered round him, but this time, as it was
  193. winter, they did not flirt the silken fans. The Great One was certain
  194. that this casting would be successful. He had been lenient with Kwan-yu
  195. on the first occasion, and now at last he and the great city were to
  196. profit by that mercy.
  197. Again he gave the signal; once more every neck was craned to see the
  198. flowing of the metal. But, alas! when the casing was removed it was seen
  199. that the new bell was no better than the first. It was, in fact, a
  200. dreadful failure, cracked and ugly, for the gold and silver and the
  201. baser elements had again refused to blend into a united whole.
  202. With a bitter cry which touched the hearts of all those present, the
  203. unhappy Kwan-yu fell upon the floor. This time he did not bow before his
  204. master, for at the sight of the miserable conglomeration of useless
  205. metals his courage failed him, and he fainted. When at last he came to,
  206. the first sight that met his eyes was the scowling face of Yung-lo. Then
  207. he heard, as in a dream, the stern voice of the Son of Heaven:
  208. "Unhappy Kwan-yu, can it be that you, upon whom I have ever heaped my
  209. favours, have twice betrayed the trust? The first time, I was sorry
  210. for you and willing to forget, but now that sorrow has turned into
  211. anger--yea, the anger of heaven itself is upon you. Now, I bid you mark
  212. well my words. A third chance you shall have to cast the bell, but if on
  213. that third attempt you fail--then by order of the Vermilion Pencil both
  214. you and Ming-lin, who recommended you, shall pay the penalty."
  215. For a long time after the Emperor had departed, Kwan-yu lay on the floor
  216. surrounded by his attendants, but chief of all those who tried to
  217. restore him was his faithful daughter. For a whole week he wavered
  218. between life and death, and then at last there came a turn in his
  219. favour. Once more he regained his health, once more he began his
  220. preparations.
  221. Yet all the time he was about his work his heart was heavy, for he felt
  222. that he would soon journey into the dark forest, the region of the great
  223. yellow spring, the place from which no pilgrim ever returns. Ko-ai, too,
  224. felt more than ever that her father was in the presence of a great
  225. danger.
  226. "Surely," she said one day to her mother, "a raven must have flown over
  227. his head. He is like the proverb of the blind man on the blind horse
  228. coming at midnight to a deep ditch. Oh, how can he cross over?"
  229. Willingly would this dutiful daughter have done anything to save her
  230. loved one. Night and day she racked her brains for some plan, but all to
  231. no avail.
  232. On the day before the third casting, as Ko-ai was sitting in front of
  233. her brass mirror braiding her long black hair, suddenly a little bird
  234. flew in at the window and perched upon her head. Immediately the
  235. startled maiden seemed to hear a voice as if some good fairy were
  236. whispering in her ear:
  237. "Do not hesitate. You must go and consult the famous juggler who even
  238. now is visiting the city. Sell your jade-stones and other jewels, for
  239. this man of wisdom will not listen unless his attention is attracted
  240. by huge sums of money."
  241. The feathered messenger flew out of her room, but Ko-ai had heard enough
  242. to make her happy. She despatched a trusted servant to sell her jade and
  243. her jewels, charging him on no account to tell her mother. Then, with a
  244. great sum of money in her possession she sought out the magician who was
  245. said to be wiser than the sages in knowledge of life and death.
  246. "Tell me," she implored, as the greybeard summoned her to his presence,
  247. "tell me how I can save my father, for the Emperor has ordered his death
  248. if he fails a third time in the casting of the bell."
  249. The astrologer, after plying her with questions, put on his
  250. tortoise-shell glasses and searched long in his book of knowledge. He
  251. also examined closely the signs of the heavens, consulting the mystic
  252. tables over and over again. Finally, he turned toward Ko-ai, who all the
  253. time had been awaiting his answer with impatience.
  254. "Nothing could be plainer than the reason of your father's failure, for
  255. when a man seeks to do the impossible, he can expect Fate to give him no
  256. other answer. Gold cannot unite with silver, nor brass with iron, unless
  257. the blood of a maiden is mingled with the molten metals, but the girl
  258. who gives up her life to bring about the fusion must be pure and good."
  259. With a sigh of despair Ko-ai heard the astrologer's answer. She loved
  260. the world and all its beauties; she loved her birds, her companions, her
  261. father; she had expected to marry soon, and then there would have been
  262. children to love and cherish. But now all these dreams of happiness must
  263. be forgotten. There was no other maiden to give up her life for Kwan-yu.
  264. She, Ko-ai, loved her father and must make the sacrifice for his sake.
  265. And so the day arrived for the third trial, and a third time Yung-lo
  266. took his place in Kwan-yu's factory, surrounded by his courtiers. There
  267. was a look of stern expectancy on his face. Twice he had excused his
  268. underling for failure. Now there could be no thought of mercy. If the
  269. bell did not come from its cast perfect in tone and fair to look upon,
  270. Kwan-yu must be punished with the severest punishment that could be
  271. meted out to man--even death itself. That was why there was a look of
  272. stern expectancy on Yung-lo's face, for he really loved Kwan-yu and did
  273. not wish to send him to his death.
  274. As for Kwan-yu himself, he had long ago given up all thought of success,
  275. for nothing had happened since his second failure to make him any surer
  276. this time of success. He had settled up his business affairs, arranging
  277. for a goodly sum to go to his beloved daughter; he had bought the coffin
  278. in which his own body would be laid away and had stored it in one of the
  279. principal rooms of his dwelling; he had even engaged the priests and
  280. musicians who should chant his funeral dirge, and, last but not least,
  281. he had arranged with the man who would have charge of chopping off his
  282. head, that one fold of skin should be left uncut, as this would bring
  283. him better luck on his entry into the spiritual world than if the head
  284. were severed entirely from the body.
  285. And so we may say that Kwan-yu was prepared to die. In fact, on the
  286. night before the final casting he had a dream in which he saw himself
  287. kneeling before the headsman and cautioning him not to forget the
  288. binding agreement the latter had entered into.
  289. Of all those present in the great foundry, perhaps the devoted Ko-ai was
  290. the least excited. Unnoticed, she had slipped along the wall from the
  291. spot where she had been standing with her mother and had planted herself
  292. directly opposite the huge tank in which the molten, seething liquid
  293. bubbled, awaiting the signal when it should be set free. Ko-ai gazed at
  294. the Emperor, watching intently for the well-known signal. When at last
  295. she saw his head move forward she sprang with a wild leap into the
  296. boiling liquid, at the same time crying in her clear, sweet voice:
  297. "For thee, dear father! It is the only way!"
  298. The molten white metal received the lovely girl into its ardent embrace,
  299. received her, and swallowed her up completely, as in a tomb of liquid
  300. fire.
  301. And Kwan-yu--what of Kwan-yu, the frantic father? Mad with grief at the
  302. sight of his loved one giving up her life, a sacrifice to save him, he
  303. had sprung forward to hold her back from her terrible death, but had
  304. succeeded only in catching one of her tiny jewelled slippers as she sank
  305. out of sight for ever--a dainty, silken slipper, to remind him always of
  306. her wonderful sacrifice. In his wild grief as he clasped this pitiful
  307. little memento to his heart he would himself have leaped in and followed
  308. her to her death, if his servants had not restrained him until the
  309. Emperor had repeated his signal and the liquid had been poured into the
  310. cast. As the sad eyes of all those present peered into the molten river
  311. of metals rushing to its earthen bed, they saw not a single sign
  312. remaining of the departed Ko-ai.
  313. This, then, my children, is the time-worn legend of the great bell
  314. of Peking, a tale that has been repeated a million times by poets,
  315. story-tellers and devoted mothers, for you must know that on this third
  316. casting, when the earthen mould was removed, there stood revealed the
  317. most beautiful bell that eye had ever looked upon, and when it was swung
  318. up into the bell-tower there was immense rejoicing among the people. The
  319. silver and the gold and the iron and the brass, held together by the
  320. blood of the virgin, had blended perfectly, and the clear voice of the
  321. monster bell rang out over the great city, sounding a deeper, richer
  322. melody than that of any other bell within the limits of the Middle
  323. Kingdom, or, for that matter, of all the world. And, strange to say,
  324. even yet the deep-voiced colossus seems to cry out the name of the
  325. maiden who gave herself a living sacrifice, "Ko-ai! Ko-ai! Ko-ai!" so
  326. that all the people may remember her deed of virtue ten thousand years
  327. ago. And between the mellow peals of music there often seems to come a
  328. plaintive whisper that may be heard only by those standing near, "Hsieh!
  329. hsieh"--the Chinese word for slipper. "Alas!" say all who hear it,
  330. "Ko-ai is crying for her slipper. Poor little Ko-ai!"
  331. And now, my dear children, this tale is almost finished, but there is
  332. still one thing you must by no means fail to remember. By order of the
  333. Emperor, the face of the great bell was graven with precious sayings
  334. from the classics, that even in its moments of silence the bell might
  335. teach lessons of virtue to the people.
  336. "Behold," said Yung-lo, as he stood beside the grief-stricken father,
  337. "amongst all yonder texts of wisdom, the priceless sayings of our
  338. honoured sages, there is none that can teach to my children so sweet a
  339. lesson of filial love and devotion as that one last act of your devoted
  340. daughter. For though she died to save you, her deed will still be sung
  341. and extolled by my people when you are passed away, yea, even when the
  342. bell itself has crumbled into ruins."

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