THE
WOODMAN AND THE MOUNTAIN FAIRIES OVER a
half a thousand years ago there lived in a northern village, near Ping
Yang, a
wood-cutter named Keel Wee. He owned a sturdy bull that carried on its
back the
fuel which he daily cut on the mountains and sold on the main streets
of his
village, at the fair, which is held every fifth day. The docile brute
could
carry a load of faggots and brushwood piled many feet high over his
head and
tied down with ropes, so that at a distance nothing but his legs were
visible.
This beast, although so huge, was the gentlest creature imaginable. The
children were all very fond of the big fellow and were accustomed to
play with
him as if he were one of them, or at least like a pet dog. The reason
of this
was that when but a week old the bull-calf had been taken from his
cow-mother
and brought up in the family with the girls and boys. Only the pup,
that also
occupied the house with the young folks, was a greater favorite. On a fine
summer morning, Keel Wee, leaving his beast behind, went up on the
mountain and
cut enough wood to load up and bring down on another day. His wife,
as she shouted good-bye, told him to be sure and be home in time for
supper,
for their eldest son had gone a-fishing and a good string of perch was
expected. Shouldering
his axe, he started up the mountain path. He had to go pretty far, for
near
towns or cities in Korea all the timber had long since been cut away.
Every
year the woodmen have to search further afield to find fuel. Arriving
in the woods where there was a clearing, Keel Wee prepared to wield his
trusty
axe. He was about to take off his big hat and outer coat and lay about
him,
when he spied, at some distance off, two fairy-like beings. They had
long hair,
looked very wise and were dressed in costume of the Chow dynasty of two
thousand years ago. They sat on stones and played the game of go-ban. Coming
near, the woodman took a respectful attitude, and, looking on, soon
became
interested in the moves of the players. So far from being at all
disconcerted
at the presence of a stranger, the two fairies seemed by eye-winks to
invite
him to look on. Feeling quite proud to be thus honored, Keel Wee,
leaning his
chin upon the handle of his axe, became absorbed in the game and by and
by grew
quite excited. Forgetting himself and his manners, he stretched forth
his right
hand to move one of the pieces. At once the fairy nearest to him gave
him a
crack on the fingers for his impudence, and jerked Keel Wee's arm away.
Then
without saying a word, he took out from his wallet something that
looked like a
persimmon seed and put in the woodman's mouth. After this all three
were
perfectly quiet. Hour after
hour the game proceeded and the players grew more intensely interested.
As for
Keel Wee, his eyes never winked, so hard did he look at the yellow
board
covered with the black and white pieces. Several times, when he thought
he saw
how the fairy on his right could beat in the game, or the one on his
left make
a better move, he felt like telling one or the other so. When, however,
he tried
to move his tongue, he found he could not speak, or utter a cry.
Somehow he
felt as if he were in a dream. Yet all
the time he became more and more wrapped up in the game, so that he
determined
to see the end of it and know which player had beaten. He forgot that
with
mountain spirits there is no night or morning, or passing of the hours,
nor do
they care anything about clocks or bells, because in fairy-land there
is no
time. All the
while Keel Wee was leaning with his chin on the stout axe-handle,
holding it
with both hands under his neck. He took no note of the sun or stars,
daylight
or darkness and he felt no hunger. Suddenly
the timber of his axe seemed to turn to dust and his chin fell. The
next thing
he knew he had lost his support. Down went his head, and forward fell
his body
as he tumbled over, upsetting the checker-board, breaking up the game
and
scattering the round pieces hither and yon over the ground. Awaking as
out of a sleep, and thoroughly ashamed of himself for his impoliteness,
he tried
to pick himself up and humbly apologize for the accident which he had
caused by
his own rudeness. He expected and was ready for a good scolding. But
when he
looked up, the fairies were gone. Nothing whatever was seen of them or
of the
play-board and checkers, not any signs of their having been there,
except that
when he put his hand on the flat stones, which they had used as seats,
he found
them warm to his touch. But where
was his axe-handle and what had happened? When he had left home, he had
come straight
from the barber shop, with his face smooth and clean shaven. Now he put
his
hand to his breast and found that he had grown a long white beard. As
for the
iron axe-head, it was there, but rusty and half buried in the ground.
He had
worn one of the big farmer's hats, which, when turned upside down,
might hold a
bushel or two of turnips, and when fastened to his head spread over his
shoulders like a roof. Where could it be? He looked about him to find
it, but
saw only the bits of the slats inside the frame and a few scraps of
what
remained, for the rest had long ago rotted away. Meanwhile he had
discovered
that his joints were stiff, and he felt like an old man. His clothes
were a
mass of rags, his hemp sandals were no more, and, on both fingers and
toes, had
grown long nails like bird's claws. His hair had burst its topknot
string and
hung down his back like a woman's, only it was grayish-white. Wondering
what it all meant, Keel Wee hobbled down the mountain and found the
road that
ran into the main street of his village. Rocks and hills, rivers and
rills were
there, but what a change! Instead
of the two grinning idol posts, of male and female face, carved out of
trunks
and trees, with sawed-out teeth painted white, and artificial ear flaps
of wood
nailed on, such as had stood before every Korean hamlet since the days
of Kija,
there was a line of high thick poles, with iron wire stretching from
one to the
other and for miles in the distance. These, he found out afterward,
were called
"lightningthread-trees" (telegraph poles). In place of the rambling
and sprawling three-sided thatched houses and yards, divided off with
mats hung
from sticks, there was a well-built but odd-looking office of painted
wood,
with openings through which he saw Korean young men sitting. They were
dressed
in strange clothes and were fingering outlandish-looking clicking
instruments. His
curiosity prompted him to go up and look more closely, when something
bumped
against his nose and nearly knocked him over. When he tried again to
get
closer, his face was flattened, his nose nearly broken, and his lips
knocked
against his teeth so that they swelled. Feeling with his hands to solve
the
mystery, he touched something hard, which he could yet see through.
Just then
he heard a young man inside shout to him in Korean: "Here,
you mountain daddy, let that glass alone." "Glass?
Glass?" thought Keel Wee. "What is that?" Yet he could not
speak. He had
hardly drawn a long breath when, looking down along two lines of
shining iron
in the street, he saw a house on wheels coming right at him. There was
no
horse, no donkey, no bull, no man pulling or pushing it, but overhead
was a
long pole, at the end of which, where it touched a string, as he
thought,
though it was an iron wire, was something that looked like a squirrel.
It was
going round and round as if turning somersaults and seemed to be
pushing the
moving house along. Inside, near the same stuff which he had already
heard was
glass, sat a dozen or so Koreans. The whole thing, wheels and all,
nearly ran
over him as it thundered by, and his mouth opened in wonder, while a
man on the
end shouted rudely: "Hello,
old goblin, where did you get your pumpkin mouth? Look out or you'll
swallow
the moon. Get out of the way of the trolley." Thus did
the man they called conductor, or guard, make fun of the poor old
fellow, for
indeed he did look like one of the mummers, who on New Year's Eve amuse
or
scare the children by putting on their shoulders the huge round devil
heads and
false faces that represent the aborigines of Korea and the goblins that
once
lived in the mountains. These masks are usually shaped like a melon and
are cut
with eyes, nose and mouth, like those which American boys have fun with
on All
Hallow Eve. This was
just the trouble. The woodman in tatters, with no topknot, long hair
down his
back and a white beard floating over his breast, leaning on a long
stick as he
hobbled down the street, looked just like one of the ancient aborigines
that
had long ago been driven into the mountains. Nurses and old women
frightened
naughty children by simply mentioning their names. When one of these
mountain
men, odd creatures that were half savage in dress and ways, came into
the town,
all the children laughed and the big dogs barked, while the little ones
ran
away, for the sight was so unusual. Even the bulls bellowed, the
donkeys
balked, and the pigs squeaked, as Keel Wee came near. No wonder he was
taken
for a mountain granddaddy, or a bumpkin dressed up like one, for few of
the
city or village folks had really ever seen one of the mountain
aborigines, any
more than they had seen tigers, that are plentiful farther away, but
which only
the hunters ever caught sight of. More and
more bewildered, Keel Wee wended his way further into the town. He saw
that the
men no longer wore topknots, or chignons, nor did the lads have on the
long
braid down their back, which showed that they were youths, but not
married yet.
Just then some rough boys, supposing that maybe some rustic gawk had
mistaken
the time of year, jeered at him and cried: "Hello,
hermit, do you think it's New Year's Eve?" Keel Wee
thought he had better ask some questions. So catching sight of a
dignified
looking gentleman, in black broad-brimmed hat and flowing white
clothes, who
was coming down the street and toward him, Keel Wee bowed his head low,
almost
to the ground. As he did so, the stone put in his mouth by the fairies
dropped
out, and his tongue was loosed. He inquired as follows: "Exalted
sir, can you tell me where may be the wretched hut of my miserable wife
and
children? She was the daughter of Gee Kim, and your contemptible slave
is Keel
Wee." The
gentleman, whose dress showed that he was a scholar and person of rank,
looked
long and hard at the questioner, to satisfy himself that he was not
being
mocked, or imposed upon by a jester, rope-dancer, sorcerer, or some
such
disreputable person, and then cried: "Heavens! man, are you a
beggar-spirit of the mountains? Your speech
sounds like the dialect spoken in these parts five hundred years ago.
In that
time such a family lived here, but the head of it, a wood-cutter and
fuel-seller, is reported to have gone up into the mountains and was
eaten up by
a tiger. Yonder in the graveyard are buried ten or more generations of
his
descendants." "Tell
me, kind sir, what has happened here since King Wang died. It was under
his
reign that I was born and lived in this village." Still
eying the questioner, as if expecting to see him jump out of his rags
and
declare himself a mummer and the whole affair a joke, the kindly
gentleman
proceeded to give in outline the history of Korea during the previous
five
hundred years. There had been many kings. The Tartars first, and then
the
Japanese had invaded the land. A great war between the Mikado's men and
the
Chinese had taken place. It was just over and now people rode in cars,
talked
hundreds of miles over wires, and traveled over iron rails as fast as a
dragon
could fly, drawn by a steel horse that drank water and fed on wood and
black
stones that burned. In a word, Korea was in an "era of civilization." This was
too much for Keel Wee. He now realized that he had lived ten times
longer than
the average man. So, hobbling over to the graveyard, he stumbled among
the
mounds until he found that one of his clan where the bones of his wife
and
children lay. Next morning, all that was seen of Keel Wee was a mass of
dust,
rags, some bones, and much long white hair. Yet, when they buried him,
there
sprang up around and on his grave strange flowers that no one had ever
seen in
city or village, but which bloomed only on the high mountains. |