<h2 class="label">XXVII</h2>
<h2 class="main">THE FORTUNES OF YOO</h2></div>
<div class="divBody">
<p class="par first">There was a man of Yong-nam, named Yoo, who lived
in the days of Se-jong. He had studied the classics, had passed his
examinations, and had become a petty official attached to the Confucian
College. He was not even of the sixth degree, so that promotion was out
of the question. He was a countryman who had no friends and no
influence, and though he had long been in Seoul there was no likelihood
of any advancement. Such being the case, disheartened and lonely, he
decided to leave the city and go back to his country home.</p>
<p class="par">There was a palace secretary who knew this countryman,
and who went to say good-bye to him before he left.</p>
<p class="par">Taking advantage of the opportunity, the countryman
said, “I have long been in Seoul, but have never yet seen the
royal office of the secretaries. Might I accompany you some day when
you take your turn?”</p>
<p class="par">The secretary said, “In the daytime there is
always a crowd of people who gather there for <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e2212" href="#xd21e2212" name=
"xd21e2212">146</SPAN>]</span>business, and no one is allowed in without a
special pass. I am going in to-morrow, however, and intend to sleep
there, so that in the evening we could have a good chance to look the
Palace over. People are not allowed to sleep in the Palace as a rule,
but doing so once would not be specially noticed.” The secretary
then gave orders to the military guard who accompanied him to escort
this man in the next day.</p>
<p class="par">As the secretary had arranged, the countryman, on the
evening following, made his way into the Palace enclosure, but what was
his surprise to find that, for some reason or other, the secretary had
not come. The gates, also, were closed behind him, so that he could not
get out. Really he was in a fix. There chanced to be a body-servant of
the secretary in the room, and he, feeling sorry for the stranger,
arranged a hidden corner where he might pass the night, and then
quietly take his departure in the morning.</p>
<p class="par">The night was beautifully clear, and apparently every
one slept but Yoo. He was wide awake, and wondering to himself if he
might not go quietly out and see the place.</p>
<p class="par">It was the time of the rainy season, and a portion of
the wall had fallen from the enclosure just in front. So Yoo climbed
over this broken wall, and, not knowing where he went, found himself
suddenly <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e2220" href="#xd21e2220"
name="xd21e2220">147</SPAN>]</span>in the royal quarters. It was a
beautiful park, with trees, and lakes, and walks. “Whose house is
this,” thought Yoo, “with its beautiful garden?”
Suddenly a man appeared, with a nice new cap on his head, carrying a
staff in his hand, and accompanied by a servant, walking slowly towards
him. It was no other than King Se-jong, taking a stroll in the
moonlight with one of his eunuchs.</p>
<p class="par">When they met Yoo had no idea that it was the King. His
Majesty asked, “Who are you, and how did you get in
here?”</p>
<p class="par">He told who he was, and how he had agreed to come in
with the secretary; how the secretary had failed; how the gates were
shut and he was a prisoner for the night; how he had seen the bright
moonlight and wished to walk out, and, finding the broken wall, had
come over. “Whose house is this, anyway?” asked Yoo.</p>
<p class="par">The King replied, “I am the master of this
house.” His Majesty then asked him in, and made him sit down on a
mat beside him. So they talked and chatted together. The King learned
that he had passed special examinations in the classics, and inquiring
how it was that Yoo had had no better office, Yoo replied that he was
an unknown countryman, that his family had no influence, and that,
while he desired office, he was forestalled by the powerful families of
the capital. “Who is there,” <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name=
"xd21e2229" href="#xd21e2229" name="xd21e2229">148</SPAN>]</span>he asked,
“that would bother himself about me? Thus all my hopes have
failed, and I have just decided to leave the city and go back home and
live out my days there.”</p>
<p class="par">The King asked again, “You know the classics so
well, do you know something also of the Book of Changes?”</p>
<p class="par">He replied, “The deeper parts I do not know, but
the easier parts only.”</p>
<p class="par">Then the King ordered a eunuch to bring the Book of
Changes. It was the time when his Majesty was reading it for himself.
The book was brought and opened in the moonlight. The King looked up a
part that had given him special difficulty, and this the stranger
explained character by character, giving the meaning with convincing
clearness. The King was delighted and wondered greatly, and so they
read together all through the night. When they separated the King said,
“You have all this knowledge and yet have never been made use of?
Alas, for my country!” said he, sighing.</p>
<p class="par">Yoo remarked that he would like to go straight home now,
if the master would kindly open the door for him.</p>
<p class="par">The King said, however, that it was too early yet, and
that he might be arrested by the guards <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name=
"xd21e2241" href="#xd21e2241" name="xd21e2241">149</SPAN>]</span>who were
about. “Go then,” said he, “to where you were, and
when it is broad daylight you can go through the open gate.”</p>
<p class="par">Yoo then bade good-bye, and went back over the broken
wall to his corner in the secretary’s room. When morning came he
went out through the main gateway and returned to his home.</p>
<p class="par">On the following day the King sent a special secretary
and had Yoo appointed to the office of Overseer of Literature. On the
promulgation of this the officials gathered in the public court, and
protested in high dudgeon against so great an office being given to an
unknown person.</p>
<p class="par">His Majesty, however, said, “If you are so opposed
to it, I’ll desist.”</p>
<p class="par">But the day following he appointed him to an office one
degree still higher. Again they all protested, and his Majesty said,
“Really, if you so object, I’ll drop the matter.”</p>
<p class="par">The day following he appointed him to an office still
one degree higher. Again they all protested and he apparently yielded
to them. But the day following higher still he was promoted, and again
the protests poured in, so much so that his Majesty seemed to yield. On
the day following this the King wrote out for him the office of
Vice-President of all the <i>Literati</i>. <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e2256" href="#xd21e2256" name=
"xd21e2256">150</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p class="par">The high officials gathered again and inquired of one
another as to what the King meant, and what they had better do about
it. “If we do not in some way prevent it, he will appoint him as
President of the <i>Literati</i>.” They decided to drop the
matter for the present, and see later what was best to do.</p>
<p class="par">A royal banquet was announced to take place, when all
the officials gathered. On this occasion the high Ministers of State
said quietly to the King, “It is not fitting that so obscure a
person have so important an office. Your Majesty’s promoting him
as you have done has thrown the whole official body into a state of
consternation. On our protest you have merely promoted him more. What
is your Majesty’s reason, please, for this action?”</p>
<p class="par">The King made no reply, but ordered a eunuch to bring
the Book of Changes. He opened it at the place of special difficulty,
and inquired as to its meaning. Even among the highest ministers not
one could give an answer. He inquired by name of this one and that, but
all were silent. The King then said, “I am greatly interested in
the reading of the Book of Changes; it is the great book of the sages.
Any one who understands it surely ought to be promoted. You, all of
you, fail to grasp its meaning, while Yoo, whom you protest
<span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e2267" href="#xd21e2267" name=
"xd21e2267">151</SPAN>]</span>against, has explained it all to me. Now
what have you to say? Yoo’s being promoted thus is just as it
ought to be. Why do you object? I shall promote him still more and
more, so cease from all opposition.”</p>
<p class="par">They were afraid and ashamed, and did not again mention
it.</p>
<p class="par">Yoo from that time on became the royal teacher of the
<i>Choo-yuk</i> (Book of Changes), and rose higher and higher in rank,
till he became Head of the Confucian College and first in influence,
surpassing all.</p>
<hr class="tb">
<p class="par"></p>
<p class="par"><i>Note.</i>—Many people of ability have no chance
for promotion. It is difficult to have one’s gifts known in high
places; how much more difficult before a king? The good fortune that
fell to the first scholar was of God’s appointment. By caring for
a vacant house the honour came to him, and he was promoted. The
other’s going thus unbidden into the Palace was a great wrong,
but by royal favour he was pardoned, received and honoured.</p>
<p class="par">By one line of poetry a man’s ability was made
manifest, and by one explanation of the <i>Choo-yuk</i> another’s
path was opened to high promotion.</p>
<p class="par">If Se-jong had not been a great and enlightened king,
how could it have happened? Very rare are <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name=
"xd21e2289" href="#xd21e2289" name="xd21e2289">152</SPAN>]</span>such
happenings, indeed! So all men wondered over what had befallen these
two. I, however, wondered more over the King’s sagacity in
finding them. To my day his virtue and accomplishments are known, so
that the world calls him Korea’s King of the Golden Age.</p>
<p class="par signed"><span class="sc">Im Bang.</span> <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e2295" href="#xd21e2295" name=
"xd21e2295">153</SPAN>]</span></p>
</div>
</div>
<div id="ch28" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pagenum">[<SPAN href="#xd21e465">Contents</SPAN>]</span>
<div class="divHead">
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