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<h2> Uraschimataro and the Turtle </h2>
<p>From the Japanische Marchen und Sagen, von David Brauns (Leipzig: Wilhelm
Friedrich).</p>
<p>There was once a worthy old couple who lived on the coast, and supported
themselves by fishing. They had only one child, a son, who was their pride
and joy, and for his sake they were ready to work hard all day long, and
never felt tired or discontented with their lot. This son’s name was
Uraschimataro, which means in Japanese, ‘Son of the island,’ and he was a
fine well-grown youth and a good fisherman, minding neither wind nor
weather. Not the bravest sailor in the whole village dared venture so far
out to sea as Uraschimataro, and many a time the neighbours used to shake
their heads and say to his parents, ‘If your son goes on being so rash,
one day he will try his luck once too often, and the waves will end by
swallowing him up.’ But Uraschimataro paid no heed to these remarks, and
as he was really very clever in managing a boat, the old people were very
seldom anxious about him.</p>
<p>One beautiful bright morning, as he was hauling his well-filled nets into
the boat, he saw lying among the fishes a tiny little turtle. He was
delighted with his prize, and threw it into a wooden vessel to keep till
he got home, when suddenly the turtle found its voice, and tremblingly
begged for its life. ‘After all,’ it said, ‘what good can I do you? I am
so young and small, and I would so gladly live a little longer. Be
merciful and set me free, and I shall know how to prove my gratitude.’</p>
<p>Now Uraschimataro was very good-natured, and besides, he could never bear
to say no, so he picked up the turtle, and put it back into the sea.</p>
<p>Years flew by, and every morning Uraschimataro sailed his boat into the
deep sea. But one day as he was making for a little bay between some
rocks, there arose a fierce whirlwind, which shattered his boat to pieces,
and she was sucked under by the waves. Uraschimataro himself very nearly
shared the same fate. But he was a powerful swimmer, and struggled hard to
reach the shore. Then he saw a large turtle coming towards him, and above
the howling of the storm he heard what it said: ‘I am the turtle whose
life you once saved. I will now pay my debt and show my gratitude. The
land is still far distant, and without my help you would never get there.
Climb on my back, and I will take you where you will.’ Uraschimataro did
not wait to be asked twice, and thankfully accepted his friend’s help. But
scarcely was he seated firmly on the shell, when the turtle proposed that
they should not return to the shore at once, but go under the sea, and
look at some of the wonders that lay hidden there.</p>
<p>Uraschimataro agreed willingly, and in another moment they were deep, deep
down, with fathoms of blue water above their heads. Oh, how quickly they
darted through the still, warm sea! The young man held tight, and
marvelled where they were going and how long they were to travel, but for
three days they rushed on, till at last the turtle stopped before a
splendid palace, shining with gold and silver, crystal and precious
stones, and decked here and there with branches of pale pink coral and
glittering pearls. But if Uraschimataro was astonished at the beauty of
the outside, he was struck dumb at the sight of the hall within, which was
lighted by the blaze of fish scales.</p>
<p>‘Where have you brought me?’ he asked his guide in a low voice.</p>
<p>‘To the palace of Ringu, the house of the sea god, whose subjects we all
are,’ answered the turtle. ‘I am the first waiting maid of his daughter,
the lovely princess Otohime, whom you will shortly see.’</p>
<p>Uraschimataro was still so puzzled with the adventures that had befallen
him, that he waited in a dazed condition for what would happen next. But
the turtle, who had talked so much of him to the princess that she had
expressed a wish to see him, went at once to make known his arrival. And
directly the princess beheld him her heart was set on him, and she begged
him to stay with her, and in return promised that he should never grow
old, neither should his beauty fade. ‘Is not that reward enough?’ she
asked, smiling, looking all the while as fair as the sun itself. And
Uraschimataro said ‘Yes,’ and so he stayed there. For how long? That he
only knew later.</p>
<p>His life passed by, and each hour seemed happier than the last, when one
day there rushed over him a terrible longing to see his parents. He fought
against it hard, knowing how it would grieve the princess, but it grew on
him stronger and stronger, till at length he became so sad that the
princess inquired what was wrong. Then he told her of the longing he had
to visit his old home, and that he must see his parents once more. The
princess was almost frozen with horror, and implored him to stay with her,
or something dreadful would be sure to happen. ‘You will never come back,
and we shall meet again no more,’ she moaned bitterly. But Uraschimataro
stood firm and repeated, ‘Only this once will I leave you, and then will I
return to your side for ever.’ Sadly the princess shook her head, but she
answered slowly, ‘One way there is to bring you safely back, but I fear
you will never agree to the conditions of the bargain.’</p>
<p>‘I will do anything that will bring me back to you,’ exclaimed
Uraschimataro, looking at her tenderly, but the princess was silent: she
knew too well that when he left her she would see his face no more. Then
she took from a shelf a tiny golden box, and gave it to Uraschimataro,
praying him to keep it carefully, and above all things never to open it.
‘If you can do this,’ she said as she bade him farewell, ‘your friend the
turtle will meet you at the shore, and will carry you back to me.’</p>
<p>Uraschimataro thanked her from his heart, and swore solemnly to do her
bidding. He hid the box safely in his garments, seated himself on the back
of the turtle, and vanished in the ocean path, waving his hand to the
princess. Three days and three nights they swam through the sea, and at
length Uraschimataro arrived at the beach which lay before his old home.
The turtle bade him farewell, and was gone in a moment.</p>
<p>Uraschimataro drew near to the village with quick and joyful steps. He saw
the smoke curling through the roof, and the thatch where green plants had
thickly sprouted. He heard the children shouting and calling, and from a
window that he passed came the twang of the koto, and everything seemed to
cry a welcome for his return. Yet suddenly he felt a pang at his heart as
he wandered down the street. After all, everything was changed. Neither
men nor houses were those he once knew. Quickly he saw his old home; yes,
it was still there, but it had a strange look. Anxiously he knocked at the
door, and asked the woman who opened it after his parents. But she did not
know their names, and could give him no news of them.</p>
<p>Still more disturbed, he rushed to the burying ground, the only place that
could tell him what he wished to know. Here at any rate he would find out
what it all meant. And he was right. In a moment he stood before the grave
of his parents, and the date written on the stone was almost exactly the
date when they had lost their son, and he had forsaken them for the
Daughter of the Sea. And so he found that since he had deft his home,
three hundred years had passed by.</p>
<p>Shuddering with horror at his discovery he turned back into the village
street, hoping to meet some one who could tell him of the days of old. But
when the man spoke, he knew he was not dreaming, though he felt as if he
had lost his senses.</p>
<p>In despair he bethought him of the box which was the gift of the princess.
Perhaps after all this dreadful thing was not true. He might be the victim
of some enchanter’s spell, and in his hand lay the counter-charm. Almost
unconsciously he opened it, and a purple vapour came pouring out. He held
the empty box in his hand, and as he looked he saw that the fresh hand of
youth had grown suddenly shrivelled, like the hand of an old, old man. He
ran to the brook, which flowed in a clear stream down from the mountain.
and saw himself reflected as in a mirror. It was the face of a mummy which
looked back at him. Wounded to death, he crept back through the village,
and no man knew the old, old man to be the strong handsome youth who had
run down the street an hour before. So he toiled wearily back, till he
reached the shore, and here he sat sadly on a rock, and called loudly on
the turtle. But she never came back any more, but instead, death came
soon, and set him free. But before that happened, the people who saw him
sitting lonely on the shore had heard his story, and when their children
were restless they used to tell them of the good son who from love to his
parents had given up for their sakes the splendour and wonders of the
palace in the sea, and the most beautiful woman in the world besides.</p>
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