THE MAD GOOSE AND THE TIGER FOREST (A Children's Story)


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DATE: Sept. 18, 2017, 6:59 a.m.

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  1. Hu-lin was a little slave girl. She had been sold by her father when
  2. she was scarcely more than a baby, and had lived for five years with
  3. a number of other children in a wretched houseboat. Her cruel master
  4. treated her very badly. He made her go out upon the street, with the
  5. other girls he had bought, to beg for a living. This kind of life was
  6. especially hard for Hu-lin. She longed to play in the fields, above
  7. which the huge kites were sailing in the air like giant birds. She liked
  8. to see the crows and magpies flying hither and thither. It was great fun
  9. to watch them build their stick nests in the tall poplars. But if her
  10. master ever caught her idling her time away in this manner he beat her
  11. most cruelly and gave her nothing to eat for a whole day. In fact he was
  12. so wicked and cruel that all the children called him Black Heart.
  13. Early one morning when Hu-lin was feeling very sad about the way she was
  14. treated, she resolved to run away, but, alas! she had not gone more than
  15. a hundred yards from the houseboat when she saw Black Heart following
  16. her. He caught her, scolded her most dreadfully, and gave her such a
  17. beating that she felt too faint to stir.
  18. For several hours she lay on the ground without moving a muscle, moaning
  19. as if her heart would break. "Ah! if only someone would save me!" she
  20. thought, "how good I would be all the rest of my days!"
  21. Now, not far from the river there lived an old man in a tumble-down
  22. shanty. The only companion he had was a goose that watched the gate for
  23. him at night and screamed out loudly if any stranger dared to prowl
  24. about the place. Hu-lin and this goose were close friends, and the slave
  25. girl often stopped to chat with the wise fowl as she was passing the old
  26. man's cottage. In this way she had learned that the bird's owner was a
  27. miser who kept a great deal of money hidden in his yard. Ch'ang, the
  28. goose, had an unusually long neck, and was thus able to pry into most of
  29. his master's affairs. As the fowl had no member of his own family to
  30. talk with, he told all he knew to Hu-lin.
  31. On the very morning when Black Heart gave Hu-lin a beating for trying
  32. to run away, Ch'ang made a startling discovery. His lord and master was
  33. not really an old miser, but a young man in disguise. Ch'ang, feeling
  34. hungry, had slipped into the house at daybreak to see if any scraps had
  35. been left from the last evening's meal. The bedroom door had blown open
  36. in the night, and there lay a young man sound asleep, instead of the
  37. greybeard whom the gander called his master. Then, before his very eyes,
  38. the youth changed suddenly into his former shape and was an old man
  39. again.
  40. In his excitement, forgetting all about his empty stomach, the
  41. terror-stricken goose rushed out into the yard to think over the
  42. mystery, but the longer he puzzled, the more strange it all seemed. Then
  43. he thought of Hu-lin, and wished that she would come by, that he might
  44. ask her opinion. He had a high regard for the slave girl's knowledge and
  45. believed that she would understand fully what had taken place.
  46. Ch'ang went to the gate. As usual, it was locked, and there was nothing
  47. for him to do but wait for his master to rise. Two hours later the miser
  48. walked out into the yard. He seemed in good spirits, and he gave Ch'ang
  49. more to eat than usual. After taking his morning smoke on the street in
  50. front of the house, he strolled around it leaving the front gate ajar.
  51. This was precisely what the gander had been expecting. Slipping quietly
  52. into the road, he turned towards the river where he could see the
  53. houseboats lined up at the wharf. On the sand near by lay a well-known
  54. form.
  55. "Hu-lin," he called as he drew near, "wake up, for I have something to
  56. tell you."
  57. "I am not asleep," she answered, turning her tear-stained face towards
  58. her friend.
  59. "Why, what's the matter? You've been crying again. Has old Black Heart
  60. been beating you?"
  61. "Hush! he's taking a nap in the boat. Don't let him hear you."
  62. "It's not likely he would understand goose-talk if he did," replied
  63. Ch'ang, smiling. "However, I suppose it's always best to be on the safe
  64. side, so I'll whisper what I have to say."
  65. Putting his bill close to her ear, he told Hu-lin of his recent
  66. discovery, and ended by asking her to tell him what it all meant.
  67. The child forgot her own misery at hearing his wonderful story. "Are you
  68. quite sure there was not some friend of the miser's spending the night
  69. with him?" she asked gravely.
  70. "Yes, yes, perfectly sure, for he has no friends," replied the gander.
  71. "Besides, I was in the house just before he locked up for the night, and
  72. I saw neither hair nor hide of any other person."
  73. "Then he must be a fairy in disguise!" announced Hu-lin wisely.
  74. "A fairy! what's that?" questioned Ch'ang, more and more excited.
  75. "Why, you old goose, don't you know what a fairy is?" And Hu-lin laughed
  76. outright. By this time she had forgotten her own troubles and was
  77. becoming more and more amused at what she had heard. "Hark!" she said in
  78. a low tone, and speaking very slowly, "a fairy is----" Here she lowered
  79. her voice to a whisper.
  80. The gander nodded violently as she went on with her explanation, and
  81. when she had finished, was speechless with amazement, for a few moments.
  82. "Well," he said finally, "if my master is that kind of man, suppose you
  83. slip away quietly and come with me, for, if a fairy is what you say he
  84. is, he can save you from all your troubles and make me happy for the
  85. rest of my days."
  86. [Illustration: "PUTTING HIS BILL TO HER EAR, HE TOLD HU-LIN OF HIS
  87. RECENT DISCOVERY."]
  88. "I wonder if I dare?" she answered, looking round fearfully towards the
  89. houseboat, from the open scuttle of which came the sound of deep
  90. snoring.
  91. "Yes, yes, of course!" coaxed Ch'ang. "He gave you such a beating that
  92. he won't be afraid of your taking to your heels again very soon."
  93. Hurriedly they went to the miser's compound. Hu-lin's heart was beating
  94. fast as she tried to decide what to say when she should actually stand
  95. before the fairy. The gate was still partly open and the two friends
  96. entered boldly.
  97. "Come this way," said Ch'ang. "He must be in the back-yard digging in
  98. his garden."
  99. But when they reached the vegetable patch there was no one to be seen.
  100. "This is very strange," whispered the gander. "I don't understand it,
  101. for I have never known him to grow tired of work so early. Surely he
  102. cannot have gone in to rest."
  103. Led by her friend, Hu-lin entered the house on tiptoe. The door of the
  104. miser's bedroom stood wide open, and they saw that there was no one
  105. either in that room or any other room of the miserable cottage.
  106. "Come! let's see what kind of bed he sleeps on," said Hu-lin, filled
  107. with curiosity. "I have never been in a fairy's room. It must be
  108. different from other people's rooms."
  109. "No, no! just a plain brick bed, like all the rest," answered Ch'ang, as
  110. they crossed the threshold.
  111. "Does he have a fire in cold weather?" asked Hu-lin, stooping to examine
  112. the small fire hole in the bricks.
  113. "Oh, yes, a hot fire every night, and even in spring when other people
  114. have stopped having fires, the brick bed is hot every night."
  115. "Well, that's rather strange for a miser, don't you think?" said the
  116. girl. "It costs more to keep a fire going than it does to feed a man."
  117. "Yes, that's true," agreed Ch'ang, pruning his feathers. "I hadn't
  118. thought of that. It is strange, very. Hu-lin, you're a wise child. Where
  119. did you learn so much?"
  120. At that moment the gander turned pale at hearing the gate slam loudly
  121. and the bar thrown into place.
  122. "Good gracious! what ever shall we do?" asked Hu-lin. "What will he say
  123. if he finds us here?"
  124. "No telling," said the other, trembling, "but, my dear little friend, we
  125. are certainly caught, for we can't get away without his seeing us."
  126. "Yes, and I've already had one beating to-day! And such a hard one that
  127. I don't believe I could live through another," sighed the child, as the
  128. tears began to flow.
  129. "There, there, little girl, don't worry! Let's hide in this dark corner
  130. behind the baskets," suggested the gander, just as the master's step was
  131. heard at the front door.
  132. Soon the frightened companions were crouching on the ground, trying
  133. to hide. Much to their relief, however, the miser did not go into his
  134. bedroom, and they soon heard him hard at work in the garden. All that
  135. day the two remained in their hiding place, afraid to show themselves
  136. outside the door.
  137. "I can't imagine what he would say if he found out that his watch-goose
  138. had brought a stranger into the house," said Ch'ang.
  139. "Perhaps he would think we were trying to steal some of the money he
  140. has hidden away," she answered, laughing, for as Hu-lin became used
  141. to her cramped quarters she grew less frightened. At any rate she
  142. was not nearly so much afraid of the miser as she had thought she was.
  143. "Besides," she reflected, "he can't be so bad as old Black Heart."
  144. Thus the day wore on and darkness fell over the land. By this time girl
  145. and goose were fast asleep in one corner of the miser's room and knew
  146. nothing more of what was happening.
  147. When the first light of a new day filtered through the paper-covered
  148. window above the miser's bed, Hu-lin awoke with a start, and at first
  149. she could not think where she was. Ch'ang was staring at her with
  150. wide-open frightened eyes that seemed to be asking, "What can it all
  151. mean? It is more than my goose brain can think out."
  152. For on the bed, instead of the miser, there lay a young man whose hair
  153. was a black as a raven's wing. A faint smile lightened up his handsome
  154. face, as if he was enjoying some delightful dream. A cry of wonder
  155. escaped Hu-lin's lips before she could hold it back. The sleeper's eyes
  156. opened instantly and were fixed upon her. The girl was so frightened
  157. that she could not move, and the gander trembled violently as he saw the
  158. change that had come over his master.
  159. The young man was even more surprised than his guests, and for two
  160. minutes he was speechless. "What does this mean?" he asked, finally,
  161. looking at Ch'ang. "What are you doing in my bedroom and who is this
  162. child who seems so frightened?"
  163. "Forgive me, kind sir, but what have you done to my master?" asked the
  164. gander, giving question for question.
  165. "Am I not your master, you mad creature?" said the man, laughing. "You
  166. are more stupid than ever this morning."
  167. "My master was old and ugly, but you are still young and handsome,"
  168. replied Ch'ang in a tone of flattery.
  169. "What," shouted the other, "you say I am still young?"
  170. "Why, yes. Ask Hu-lin, if you don't believe me."
  171. The man turned towards the little girl.
  172. "Yes, indeed you are, sir," she replied in answer to his look. "Never
  173. have I seen a man so beautiful."
  174. "At last! at last!" he cried, laughing joyfully, "I am free, free, free
  175. from all my troubles, but how it has come about is more than I can say!"
  176. For a few minutes he stood in a deep study, snapping his long fingers
  177. as if trying to solve some hard problem. At last a smile lighted up his
  178. face. "Ch'ang," he asked, "what was it you called your guest when you
  179. spoke of her a minute ago?"
  180. "I am Hu-lin," said the child simply, "Hu-lin, the slave girl."
  181. He clapped his hands. "That's right! That's right!" he cried. "I see it
  182. all now; it is as plain as day." Then, noticing the look of wonder on
  183. her face, "It is to you that I owe my freedom from a wicked fairy, and
  184. if you like, I'll tell you the story of my misfortune."
  185. "Pray do, kind sir," she replied eagerly. "I told Ch'ang that you were
  186. a fairy, and I should like to know if I was right."
  187. "Well, you see," he began, "my father is a rich man who lives in a
  188. distant county. When I was a boy he gave me everything I wished. I was
  189. so humoured and petted from earliest childhood that at last I began to
  190. think there was nothing at all in the world I could not have for the
  191. asking, and nothing that I must not do if I wished to.
  192. "My teacher often scolded me for having such notions. He told me there
  193. was a proverb: 'Men die for gain, birds perish to get food.' He thought
  194. such men were very foolish. He told me that money would go a long way
  195. towards making a man happy, but he always ended by saying that the gods
  196. were more powerful than men. He said I must always be careful not to
  197. make the evil spirits angry. Sometimes I laughed in his face, telling
  198. him that I was rich and could buy the favour of gods and fairies. The
  199. good man would shake his head, saying, 'Take care, my boy, or you will
  200. be sorry for these rash speeches.'"
  201. "One day, after he had been giving me a long lecture of this sort, we
  202. were walking in the garden of my father's compound. I was even more
  203. daring than usual and told him that I cared nothing for the rules other
  204. people followed. 'You say,' said I, 'that this well here in my father's
  205. yard is ruled by a spirit, and that if I were to anger him by jumping
  206. over it, he would be vexed and give me trouble.' 'Yes,' said he, 'that
  207. is exactly what I said, and I repeat it. Beware, young man, beware of
  208. idle boasting and of breaking the law.' 'What do I care for a spirit
  209. that lives on my father's land?' I answered with a sneer. 'I don't
  210. believe there is a spirit in this well. If there is, it is only another
  211. of my father's slaves.'
  212. "So saying, and before my tutor could stop me, I leaped across the mouth
  213. of the well. No sooner had I touched the ground than I felt a strange
  214. shrinking of my body. My strength left me in the twinkling of an eye,
  215. my bones shortened, my skin grew yellow and wrinkled. I looked at my
  216. pigtail and found that the hair had suddenly grown thin and white. In
  217. every way I had been changed completely into an old man.
  218. "My teacher stared at me in amazement, and when I asked him what it all
  219. meant my voice was as shrill as that of early childhood. 'Alas! my dear
  220. pupil,' he replied, 'now you will believe what I told you. The spirit of
  221. the well is angry at your wicked conduct and has punished you. You have
  222. been told a hundred times that it is wrong to leap over a well; yet you
  223. did this very thing,' 'But is there nothing that can be done,' I cried;
  224. 'is there no way of restoring my lost youth?' He looked at me sadly and
  225. shook his head.
  226. "When my father learned of my sad condition he was terribly upset. He
  227. did everything that could be done to find some way for me to regain my
  228. youth. He had incense burned at a dozen temples and he himself offered
  229. up prayers to various gods. I was his only son, and he could not be
  230. happy without me. At last, when everything else had been done, my worthy
  231. teacher thought of asking a fortune-teller who had become famous in the
  232. city. After inquiring about everything that had led up to my sad plight,
  233. the wise man said that the spirit of the well, as a punishment, had
  234. changed me into a miser. He said that only when I was sleeping would
  235. I be in my natural state, and even then if any one chanced to enter my
  236. room or catch a glimpse of my face, I would be at once changed back into
  237. a greybeard."
  238. "I saw you yesterday morning," shouted the gander. "You were young and
  239. handsome, and then before my very eyes you were changed back into an old
  240. man!"
  241. "To continue my story," said the young man, "the fortune-teller at last
  242. announced that there was only one chance for my recovery and that a very
  243. small one. If at any time, while I was in my rightful shape, that is, as
  244. you see me now, a mad goose should come in, leading a tiger-forest out
  245. of slavery, the charm would be broken, and the evil spirit would no
  246. longer have control over me. When the fortune-teller's answer was
  247. brought to my father, he gave up hope, and so did I, for no one
  248. understood the meaning of such a senseless riddle.
  249. "That night I left my native city, resolved not to disgrace my people
  250. any longer by living with them. I came to this place, bought this house
  251. with some money my father had given me, and at once began living the
  252. life of a miser. Nothing satisfied my greed for money. Everything must
  253. be turned into cash. For five years I have been storing away money, and,
  254. at the same time, starving myself, body and soul.
  255. "Soon after my arrival here, remembering the fortune-teller's riddle,
  256. I decided that I would keep a goose to serve as night watch-man instead
  257. of a dog. In this way I made a start at working out the riddle."
  258. "But I am not a mad goose," hissed the gander angrily. "If it had not
  259. been for me you would still be a wrinkled miser."
  260. "Quite right, dear Ch'ang, quite right," said the young man soothingly;
  261. "you were not mad; so I gave you the name _Ch'ang_, which means mad, and
  262. thus made a mad goose of you."
  263. "Oh, I see," said Hu-lin and Ch'ang together. "How clever!"
  264. "So, you see, I had part of my cure here in my back-yard all the time;
  265. but though I thought as hard as I could, I could think of no way of
  266. securing that Ch'ang should lead a tiger-forest into my room while I was
  267. sleeping. The thing seemed absurd, and I soon gave up trying to study it
  268. out. To-day by accident it has really come to pass."
  269. "So I am the tiger-forest, am I?" laughed Hu-lin.
  270. "Yes, indeed, you are, my dear child, a pretty little tiger-forest, for
  271. _Hu_ means _tiger_, and _lin_ is surely good Chinese for a _grove of
  272. trees_. Then, too, you told me you were a slave girl. Hence, Ch'ang led
  273. you out of slavery."
  274. "Oh, I am so glad!" said Hu-lin, forgetting her own poverty, "so glad
  275. that you don't have to be a horrible old miser any longer."
  276. Just at that moment there was a loud banging on the front gate.
  277. "Who can be knocking in that fashion?" asked the young man in
  278. astonishment.
  279. "Alas! it must be Black Heart, my master," said Hu-lin, beginning to
  280. cry.
  281. "Don't be frightened," said the youth, soothingly stroking the child's
  282. head. "You have saved me, and I shall certainly do as much for you. If
  283. this Mr. Black Heart doesn't agree to a fair proposal he shall have a
  284. black eye to remember his visit by."
  285. It did not take long for the grateful young man to buy Hu-lin's liberty,
  286. especially as he offered as much for her freedom as her master had
  287. expected to get when she was fourteen or fifteen years of age.
  288. When Hu-lin was told of the bargain she was wild with delight. She bowed
  289. low before her new master and then, kneeling, touched her head nine
  290. times on the floor. Rising, she cried out, "Oh, how happy I am, for now
  291. I shall be yours for ever and ever and ever, and good old Ch'ang shall
  292. be my playmate."
  293. "Yes, indeed," he assured her, "and when you are a little older I shall
  294. make you my wife. At present you will go with me to my father's house
  295. and become my little betrothed."
  296. "And I shall never again have to beg for crusts on the street?" she
  297. asked him, her eyes full of wonder.
  298. "No! never!" he answered, laughing, "and you need never fear another
  299. beating."

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