There was once a boy who loved stories. His name was
Dong Chin, and every night at bedtime he listened to stories from a
favorite family servant, a man named Pak.
Now, Dong Chin was a fine boy, but there was one bad
thing about him. He didn’t like to share the stories he heard. He
wanted to keep them to himself. So every night after listening, he said,
“Mr. Pak, make me a promise.”
“What is it, young master?” said Pak, though he knew
well enough.
“Promise you won’t tell those stories again to
anyone but me. Promise they will stay in this room.”
“All right, young master,” said Pak with a sigh. “I
promise.”
Years went by and Dong Chin grew up. When he was 15,
his father chose him a bride of the same age from a family in the next
valley. Everyone in the household was excited at the coming marriage.
On the night before the wedding, Dong Chin’s father
undid his son’s long braid—the kind worn by all sons and daughters till
they married. Then he fixed the hair in a tight topknot, just like his
own. On his son’s head he placed a skullcap with a hole for the topknot
to poke through. And over it all, he placed a feather-light, see-through
hat of horsehair mesh.
Dong Chin was so proud. For years he had waited for
this moment. Now he was a man!
At last the wedding day arrived. In the early
morning, Dong Chin and his father made ready to go to the bride’s house
for the ceremony. Everyone bustled about to help and to prepare for the
celebration the next day, when the bride would be brought home.
Pak was busy like everyone else. But as he rushed
around, he happened to pass outside Dong Chin’s room. To his surprise,
he heard a murmur of many voices.
“That’s strange,” he said to himself. “The young
master isn’t in there now, and no one else should be either.”
He went up to the paper window, carefully poked a
small hole, and peeked through. Then he gasped.
The air was teeming with spirits—hundreds of them!
Over, under, and around each other they swarmed. There were so many,
they barely had room to fly, and they didn’t look one bit happy!
“Silence!” called one of the spirits. “Stop talking
all at once, or we’ll never get anywhere.”
The murmur died away. “That’s right,” said another
spirit. “The boy’s wedding is today, and we have to decide what to do.”
“We must have revenge!” said another. “He has to be
punished for keeping us stories all stuck here.”
Pak gasped again. “It’s the stories!” he said in
wonder. “The ones that had to stay in the room!”
“Yes, he must be punished,” said another spirit.
“But how?”
“I have an idea,” said another. “I’m a story that
has a poisoned well in it. Why don’t I put my well by the road? If he
drinks the water, he’ll be deathly ill.”
“Wonderful!” said another. “I’m a story with
poisoned strawberries in it. I’ll set them farther down the road, in
case he doesn’t drink.”
“Good thinking!” said another. “I’m a story with a
red-hot poker. I’ll put it in the cushion he steps onto at the bride’s
house—in case he neither eats nor drinks on the way. It will burn him
terribly!”
“That should do it,” said still another. “But in
case he escapes you all, I’ll be ready. I’m a story with a deadly snake.
I’ll hide it under the sleeping mat of the bride. When they go to bed,
it will bite and kill them both!”
“No!” cried Pak. He leaped to the door and threw it
open. But there was . . . nothing.
“I can’t have imagined it,” he said. “They must
still be here, and I just can’t see them. But—The young master! I must
protect the young master!”
He rushed out to the road, where the wedding
procession was already gathering. A gaily decorated sedan chair—for the
bride’s journey back—rested on two long poles held by four servants.
Dong Chin and his father each sat on a small white horse, its reins held
by a servant standing in front.
Pak grabbed the reins to Dong Chin’s horse, knocking
the other servant out of the way. “I will lead your horse today, young
master!”
“Mr. Pak!” said the father. “Go inside! You’re
needed here to prepare for tomorrow!”
“Please, master!” begged Pak. “It is my dearest wish
to lead the young master’s horse on his wedding day!”
“Father, is it all right?” said Dong Chin. “I would
like Mr. Pak to come with us.”
“Oh, all right,” his father grumbled. Then they
lined up and started out, with Dong Chin in front and his father in the
rear.
It was spring, and the road led over hillsides of
pink, red, and white azaleas. The day was warm, and Dong Chin was
relieved when he spotted a well by the road.
“Mr. Pak, I’m thirsty. Please bring me a drink from
that well. There’s a gourd dipper there for the water.”
“A gourd dipper!” said Pak in a voice filled with
horror. “Oh no, young master! You can’t drink from a common gourd on
your wedding day! Wait till we reach the bride’s house, where you’ll
drink from porcelain.” And he hurried the horse past the well.
Dong Chin was amazed. It was not a servant’s place
to disregard orders! But he said nothing.
After a while, they came to a strawberry field. “Mr.
Pak, I’m both thirsty and hungry. Pick me some of these strawberries.”
“These?” said Pak in a tone of disbelief. “Young
master, they’re so tiny! On your wedding day you must have only the
largest, juiciest strawberries. You’ll get much better at your bride’s
house.” And he rushed right on.
Dong Chin was stunned. He heard his father call from
the rear, “What’s going on, up there?”
“Nothing, Father,” Dong Chin called back. He turned
to Pak and hissed, “What are you doing? If my father realizes you are
disobeying, he’ll have you paddled!”
“Trust me, young master,” Pak pleaded softly.
“Please trust me!”
At last they arrived at the bride’s house, where her
father met them at the gate. As was the custom, two servants brought
out a cushion for Dong Chin to step down on. But he’d barely touched it
when Pak grabbed a corner and jerked it away. The bride’s father gasped
as Dong Chin tumbled into the dirt.
“This cushion is filthy!” yelled Pak, holding it up
to the servants, then tossing it away. “How dare you bring such a
cushion on the young master’s wedding day!”
The servants rushed to lift the young man to his
feet and brush him off. Dong Chin was in shock, and he could see storm
clouds on his father’s face. But they could say nothing in front of
others.
They went on into the garden. A platform had been
set up, covered by rich weavings. On a small table in its center sat a
gilded wooden goose, symbol of faithfulness.
When the moment arrived, Dong Chin took his place on
the platform. The bride, whose name was Mai Hee, was led into the
garden in her bridal gown of green.
It was Dong Chin’s first sight of his future wife!
Her powdered face was pale like ivory, and her eyebrows, shaved to a
thin line, were arched like butterfly wings. Her raven-black hair, oiled
and shiny, was done up in loops, bands, waves, and bangs, topped with a
headdress decked with jewels and bright ribbons.
Mai Hee stepped onto the platform and faced Dong
Chin. He thought she looked quite lovely, but he was too nervous even to
smile. After a moment, she silently bowed to him four times. Then he
bowed four times back.
The ceremony was complete. Dong Chin was married!
For the rest of the day, Dong Chin enjoyed the
feasting and entertainment. But he was anxious to see more of Mai Hee,
who had been led away to a separate feast in the women’s quarters.
Late that night, when the guests had left, the young
man was brought at last to the room of his bride. He entered and stood
shyly in the candlelight.
Mai Hee, still in her bridal gown, knelt silently in
a corner, as was the custom. She smiled nervously as Dong Chin
approached and bowed.
“I am honored to meet you,” he said. “With your
help, I shall try to be a worthy husband.”
Just then, the door flew open. In rushed Pak with a
long kitchen knife. “Look out, young master!”
Mai Hee screamed and leaped up, and Dong Chin was
beside himself. “Mr. Pak! Mr. Pak! Leave at once!”
But Pak wasn’t listening. He rushed to the sleeping
mat and snatched it up. There lay a snake, writhing and hissing. Pak
stabbed it again and again, till at last it lay still.
Then Pak turned and sank to his knees, bowing low
before the speechless Dong Chin. “Young master, please excuse the
impudence of this worthless servant.”
By now, others were rushing in, drawn by the noise.
“Mr. Pak!” shouted Dong Chin’s father. “What is the meaning of this
outrage?”
“Father,” said Dong Chin, pointing to the snake,
“Mr. Pak saved our lives!”
Then Pak told them all about the story spirits and
their plans for revenge. “No one listens to an old servant,” he said,
“so I knew I must protect the young master myself.”
“It’s all my fault,” said Dong Chin. “I’m the one
who wanted to keep the stories to myself. But not anymore. From this
very night on, I’ll tell them whenever I can, to whoever will listen.
Mr. Pak, will you promise to tell them too?”
“All right, young master,” said Pak with a smile. “I
promise.”
* * *
And so ends the tale of the story spirits. But now
that you know it, make sure you tell it to someone else—
Or the story might be angry at you!
About the Story
This tale is retold from “The Story-Spirits,” recorded
in Korea in 1920 from storyteller Mun Czang-Zun. It was translated and
published by Korean folklorist Zong In-Sob, first in Japanese in his Ondoru
Yawa, Tokyo, 1927; and later in English in his Folk Tales from
Korea, Routledge & Kegan Paul, London, 1952. Another version
appears as the title story of The Story Bag: A Collection of Korean
Folk Tales, by Kim So-Un, translated by Setsu Higashi, Tuttle, Tokyo
and Rutland, Vermont, 1955.
Similar tales of loyal servants have been told
throughout Europe, including “Faithful John,” found in the collection of
the Brothers Grimm. The motif of story spirits itself, though, seems to
be distinctively South and East Asian. (One story with this motif is
retold, and another noted, in A Flowering Tree, and Other Oral Tales
from India, A. K. Ramanujan, University of California Press,
Berkeley, 1997.)
The customs depicted in this story are those of
traditional Korean culture. Good sources of background information are Tales
of a Korean Grandmother, by Frances Carpenter, Doubleday, Garden
City, New York, 1947; and for older readers, Corea: The Hermit
Nation, by William Elliot Griffis, Scribners, New York, 1882. Of
course, much of the traditional culture has vanished in modern times.
The status of women, for example, has greatly improved.
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