<h2 class="label">XXIX</h2>
<h2 class="main">THE SNAKE’S REVENGE</h2></div>
<div class="divBody">
<p class="par first">There lived in ancient days an archer, whose home
was near the Water Gate of Seoul. He was a man of great strength and
famous for his valour.</p>
<p class="par">Water Gate has reference to a hole under the city wall,
by which the waters of the Grand Canal find their exit. In it are iron
pickets to prevent people’s entering or departing by that
way.</p>
<p class="par">On a certain afternoon when this military officer was
taking a walk, a great snake was seen making its way by means of the
Water Gate. The snake’s head had already passed between the bars,
but its body, being larger, could not get through, so there it was held
fast. The soldier drew an arrow, and, fitting it into the string, shot
the snake in the head. Its head being fatally injured, the creature
died. The archer then drew it out, pounded it into a pulp, and left
it.</p>
<p class="par">A little time later the man’s wife conceived and
bore a son. From the first the child was afraid of its father, and when
it saw him it used to cry and seem greatly frightened. As it grew it
hated <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e2361" href="#xd21e2361" name=
"xd21e2361">159</SPAN>]</span>the sight of its father more and more. The
man became suspicious of this, and so, instead of loving his son, he
grew to dislike him.</p>
<p class="par">On a certain day, when there were just the two of them
in the room, the officer lay down to have a midday siesta, covering his
face with his sleeve, but all the while keeping his eye on the boy to
see what he would do. The child glared at his father, and thinking him
asleep, got a knife and made a thrust at him. The man jumped, grabbed
the knife, and then with a club gave the boy a blow that left him dead
on the spot. He pounded him into a pulp, left him and went away. The
mother, however, in tears, covered the little form with a quilt and
prepared for its burial. In a little the quilt began to move, and she
in alarm raised it to see what had happened, when lo! beneath it the
child was gone and there lay coiled a huge snake instead. The mother
jumped back in fear, left the room and did not again enter.</p>
<p class="par">When evening came the husband returned and heard the
dreadful story from his wife. He went in and looked, and now all had
metamorphosed into a huge snake. On the head of it was the scar mark of
the arrow that he had shot. He said to the snake, “You and I were
originally not enemies, I therefore did wrong in shooting you as I did;
but your intention to take revenge through <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e2367" href="#xd21e2367" name=
"xd21e2367">160</SPAN>]</span>becoming my son was a horrible deed. Such a
thing as this is proof that my suspicions of you were right and just.
You became my son in order to kill me, your father; why, therefore,
should I not in my turn kill you? If you attempt it again, it will
certainly end in my taking your life. You have already had your
revenge, and have once more transmigrated into your original shape, let
us drop the past and be friends from now on. What do you
say?”</p>
<p class="par">He repeated this over and urged his proposals, while the
snake with bowed head seemed to listen intently. He then opened the
door and said, “Now you may go as you please.” The snake
then departed, making straight for the Water Gate, and passed out
between the bars. It did not again appear.</p>
<hr class="tb">
<p class="par"></p>
<p class="par"><i>Note.</i>—Man is a spiritual being, and
different from all other created things, and though a snake has power
of venom, it is still an insignificant thing compared with a man. The
snake died, and by means of the transmigration of its soul took its
revenge. Man dies, but I have never heard that he can transmigrate as
the snake did. Why is it that though a spiritual being he is unable to
do what beasts do? I have seen many innocent men killed, but not one of
them has ever returned to <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e2377"
href="#xd21e2377" name="xd21e2377">161</SPAN>]</span>take his revenge on
the lawless one who did it, and so I wonder more than ever over these
stories of the snake. The Superior Man’s knowing nothing of the
law that governs these things is a regret to me.</p>
<p class="par signed"><span class="sc">Im Bang.</span> <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e2383" href="#xd21e2383" name=
"xd21e2383">162</SPAN>]</span></p>
</div>
</div>
<div id="ch30" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pagenum">[<SPAN href="#xd21e483">Contents</SPAN>]</span>
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