How Greed For A Trifling Thing Led A Man To Lose A Great One [The Chinese Fairy Book]
ONCE upon a time there was an old woman, who had two sons. But her older son did not love his parents, and left his mother and brother. The younger one served her so faithfully, however, that all the people spoke of his filial affection.
One
day it happened that there was a theatrical performance given outside the
village. The younger son started to carry his mother there on his back, so that
she might look on. But there was a ravine before the village, and he slipped
and fell down in the middle of it. And his mother was killed by the rolling
stones, and her blood and flesh were sprinkled about everywhere. The son
stroked his mother’s corpse, and wept bitterly. He was about to kill himself when, suddenly,
he saw a priest standing before him.
The
latter said: “Have no fear, for I can bring your mother back to life again!”
And as he said so, he stooped, gathered up her flesh and bones, and laid them
together as they should be. Then he breathed upon them, and at once the mother
was alive again. This made the son very happy, and he thanked the priest on his
knees. Yet on a sharp point of rock he still saw a bit of his mother’s flesh
hanging, a bit about an inch long.
“That
should not be left hanging there either,” said he, and hid it in his breast.
“In
truth, you love your mother as a son should,” said the priest. Then he bade the
son give him the bit of flesh, kneaded a manikin out of it, breathed upon it,
and in a minute there it stood, a really fine-looking little boy.
“His
name is Small Profit,” said he, turning to the son, “and you may call him
brother. You are poor and have not the wherewithal with which to nourish your
mother. If you need something, Small Profit can get it for you.”
The
son thanked him once more, then took his mother on his back again, and his new
little brother by the hand, and went home. And when he said to Small Profit:
“Bring meat and wine!” then meat and wine were at hand at once, and steaming
rice was already cooking in the pot. And when he said to Small Profit: “Bring
money and cloth!” then his purse filled itself with money, and the chests were
heaped up with cloth to the brim. Whatever he asked for that he received. Thus,
in the course of time, they came to be very well off indeed.
But
his older brother envied him greatly. And when there was another theatrical
performance in the village, he took his mother on his back—by force—and went to
it. And when he reached the ravine, he slipped purposely, and let his mother
fall into the depths, only intent to see that she really was shattered into
fragments. And sure enough his mother had such a bad fall that her limbs and
trunk were strewn around in all directions. He then climbed down, took his
mother’s head in his hands, and pretended to weep .
And
at once the priest was on hand again, and said: “I can wake the dead to life
again, and surround white bones with flesh and blood!”
Then
he did as he had done before, and the mother came to life again. But the older
brother already had hidden one of her ribs on purpose. He now pulled it out and
said to the priest: “Here is a bone left. What shall I do with it?”
The
priest took the bone, enclosed it in lime and earth, breathed upon it, as he
had done the other time, and it became a little man, resembling Small Profit,
but larger in stature.
“His
name is Great Duty,” he told his older brother, “if you stick to him he will
always lend you a hand.”
The
son took his mother back again, and Great Duty walked beside him.
When
he came to their courtyard door, he saw his younger brother coming out, holding
Small Profit in his arms.
“Where
are you going?” he said to him.
His
brother answered: “Small Profit is a divine being, who does not wish to dwell
for all time among men. He wants to fly back to the heavens, and so I am
escorting him.”
“Give
Small Profit to me! Don’t let him get away!” cried the older brother.
Yet,
before he had ended his speech, Small Profit was rising in the air. The older
brother then quickly let his mother drop on the ground, and stretched out his
hand to catch Small Profit. But he did not succeed, and now Great Duty, too,
rose from the ground, took Small Profit’s hand, and together they ascended to
the clouds and disappeared.
Then
the older brother stamped on the ground, and said with a sigh: “Alas, I have
lost my Great Duty because I was too greedy for that Small Profit!”
Note:
In China—usually on festive days or because of some religious celebration—a
provisional stage is erected before the village or temple, and a play given. Permanent
theaters are to be found only in the large cities.
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