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PRINCE
SANDALWOOD, THE FATHER OF KOREA One
evening when Papa Kim came home from his office in the Government
buildings, he
carried two little books in his hand, which he handed over to Grandma.
One was
a little almanac, looking in its bright cover of red, green and blue,
as gay as
the piles of cakes and confectionery made when people get married; for
every
one knows how rich in colors are pastry and sweets for the bride's
friends at a
Korean wedding party. The second
little book contained the direction sent out by the Royal Minister of
Ceremonies for the celebration of the festival in honor of the
Ancestor-Prince,
Old Sandalwood, the Father of Korea. Twice a year in Ping Yang City
they made
offerings of meat and other food in his honor, but always uncooked. "Who
was old Sandalwood?" asked Peach Blossom, the older of the little
girls. "What
did he do?" asked Yongi (Dragon), the older boy. "Let
me tell you," said Grandma, as they cuddled together round her on the
oiled-paper carpet, over the main flue, at the end of the room, where
it was
warmest; for it was early in December, and the wind was roaring
outside. "Now
I shall tell you, also, why the bear is good and the tiger bad," said
Grandma.
"Well, to begin — "Long,
long ago, before there were any refined people in the Land of the Dawn,
and no
men but rude savages, a bear and a tiger met together. It was on the
southern
slope of Old Whitehead Mountain in the forests. These wild animals were
not
satisfied with the kind of human beings already on the earth, and they
wanted
better ones. They thought that if they could become human, they would
be able
to improve upon the quality. So these patriotic beasts, the bear and
the tiger,
agreed to go before Hananim, the Great One of Heaven and Earth, and ask
him to
change at once their form and nature; or, at least, tell them how it
could be
done. "But
where to find Him — that
was the question. So they put their
heads down in token of politeness, stretched out their paws and waited
a long
while, hoping to get light on the subject. "Then
a Voice spoke out saying, 'Eat a bunch of garlic and stay in a cave for
twenty-one days. If you do, you will become human.' "So
into the dark cave they crawled, chewed their garlic and went to sleep.
"It
was cold and gloomy in the cave and with nothing to hunt or eat, the
tiger got
tired. Day after day he moped, snarled, growled and behaved rudely to
his
companion. But the bear bore the tiger's insults. "Finally
on the eleventh day, the tiger, seeing no signs of losing his stripes,
or of
shedding his hair, claws or tail, with no prospect of fingers or toes
in view,
concluded to give up trying to become a man. He bounded out of the cave
and at
once went hunting in the woods, going back to his old life. "But
the bear, patiently sucking his paw, waited till the twenty-one days
had
passed. Then his hairy hide and claws dropped off, like an overcoat.
His nose
and ears suddenly shortened and he stood upright — a perfect woman. "Walking
out of the cave, the new creature sat beside a brook, and in the pure
water
beheld how lovely she was. There she waited to see what would take
place next. "About
this time, while these things were going on down in the world, matters
of
interest were happening in the skies. Whanung, the Son of the Great One
in the
Heavens, asked his father to give him an earthly kingdom to rule over.
Pleased
with his request, the Lord of Heaven decided to present his son with
the Land
of the Dragon's Back, which men called Korea. "Now
as everybody knows, this country of ours, the Everlasting Great, Land
of the
Day-spring, rose up on the first morning of creation out of the sea, in
the
form of a dragon. His spine, loins and tail form the great range of
mountains,
with its little hills, that makes the backbone of our beautiful
country, while
his head rises skyward in the eternal White Mountain in the North. On
its
summit, amid the snow and ice, lies the blue lake of pure water, from
which
flow out our boundary rivers." "What
is the name of this lake?" asked Yongi the boy. "The
Dragon's Pool," said Grandma Kim, "and during one whole night, ever
so long ago, the dragon breathed hard and long, until its breath filled
the
heavens with clouds. This was the way that the Great One in the Skies
prepared
the way for his son's coming to earth. "People
thought there was an earthquake, but when they woke up in the morning
and
looked up to the grand mountain, so gloriously white, they saw the
cloud rising
far up in the sky. As the bright sun shone upon it, the cloud turned
into pink,
red, yellow and the whole eastern sky looked so lovely that our country
then
received its name — the
Land of Morning Radiance. "Down
out of his cloud of many colors, and borne on the wind, Whanung, the
Heavenly
Prince, descended first to the mountain top, and then to the lower
earth. When
he entered the great forest, he found a beautiful woman sitting by the
brookside. It was the bear that had been
transformed into lovely human shape and nature. "The
Heavenly Prince was delighted. He breathed on her and, by and by, a
little baby
boy was born. "The
mother made for her son a cradle of soft moss and reared her child in
the
forest. "Now
the people who dwelt at the foot of the mountain were in those days
very rude
and simple. They wore no hats, had no white clothes, lived in huts, and
did not
know how to warm their houses with flues running under the floors, nor
had they
any books or writings. Their sacred place was under a sandalwood tree,
on a
small mountain named Tabak, in Ping Tang province. "They
had seen the cloud rising from the Dragon's Pool so rich in colors, and
as they
looked they saw it move southward and nearer to them, until it stood
over the
sacred sandalwood tree; when out stepped a white-robed being, and
descending
through the air alighted in the forest and on the tree. "Oh,
how beautiful this spirit looked against the blue sky I Yet the tree
was far
away and long was the journey to it. "
'Let us all go to the sacred tree,' said the leader of the people. So
together
they hied over hill and valley until they reached the holy ground and
ranged
themselves in circles about it. "A
lovely sight greeted their eyes. There sat under the tree a youth of
grand
appearance, arrayed in princely dress. Though young looking and rosy in
face,
his countenance was august and majestic. Despite his youth, he was wise
and
venerable. " 'I
have come from my ancestors in Heaven to rule over you, my children,'
he said,
looking at them most kindly. "At
once the people fell on their knees and all bent reverently, shouting: "
'Thou art our king, we acknowledge thee, and will loyally obey only
thee.' "Seeing
that they wanted to know what he could tell them, he began to instruct
them,
even before he gave them laws and rules and taught them how to improve
their
houses. He told them stories. The first one explained to them why it
was that
the bear is good and the tiger bad. "The
people wondered at his wisdom and henceforth the tiger was hated, while
people
began to like the bear more and more. "What
name shall we give to our King, so that we may properly address him?"
asked
the people of their elders. "It is right that we should call him after
the
place in which we saw him, under our holy tree. Let his title,
therefore, be
the August and Venerable Sandalwood.' So they saluted him thus and he
accepted
the honor. "Seeing
that the people were rough and unkempt, Prince Sandalwood showed them
how to
tie up and dress their hair. He ordained that men should wear their
long locks
in the form of a topknot. Boys must braid their hair and let it hang
down over
their backs. No boy could be called a man, until he married a wife.
Then he
could twist his hair into a knot, put on a hat, have a head-dress like
an adult
and wear a long white coat. "As
for the women, they must plait their tresses and wear them plainly at
their
neck, except at marriage, or on great occasions of ceremony. Then they
might
pile up their hair like a pagoda and use long hairpins, jewels, silk
and flowers. "Thus
our Korean civilization was begun, and to this day the law of the hat
and hair
distinguishes us above all people," said Grandma. "We still honor the
August and Venerable Prince Sandalwood. To-morrow, you shall see the
offerings.
Now, good-night, my darlings." Just then
great bell, In Jung (Men decide to go to sleep), boomed, and almost
before its
last long lingering moan of Ah-Meh-la (Mother's fault)1, had
died
into quietness the little folks were on their bed-quilts and the lights
were
out. 1 See the
story — The Voice of the Bell. |