Myths and Legends of China E. Werner (best reads of all time .TXT) đ
- Author: E. Werner
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HsĂŒ, the Dragon-slayer
HsĂŒ ChĂȘn-chĂŒn was a native either of Ju-ning Fu in Honan, or of Nan-châang Fu in Kiangsi. His father was HsĂŒ Su. His personal name was Ching-chih, and his ordinary name Sun.
At forty-one years of age, when he was Magistrate of Ching-yang, near the modern Chih-chiang Hsien, in Hupei, during times of drought he had only to touch a piece of tile to turn it into gold, and thus relieve the people of their distress. He also saved many lives by curing sickness through the use of talismans and magic formulĂŠ.
During the period of the dynastic troubles he resigned Page 223and joined the famous magician Kuo Pâo. Together they proceeded to the minister Wang Tun, who had risen against the Eastern Chin dynasty. Kuo Pâoâs remonstrances only irritated the minister, who cut off his head.
HsĂŒ Sun then threw his chalice on the ridgepole of the room, causing it to be whirled into the air. As Wang Tun was watching the career of the chalice, HsĂŒ disappeared and escaped. When he reached Lu-chiang Kâou, in Anhui, he boarded a boat, which two dragons towed into the offing and then raised into the air. In an instant they had borne it to the LĂŒ Shan Mountains, to the south of Kiukiang, in Kiangsi. The perplexed boatman opened the window of his boat and took a furtive look out. Thereupon the dragons, finding themselves discovered by an infidel, set the boat down on the top of the mountain and fled.
The Spiritual Alligator
In this country was a dragon, or spiritual alligator, which transformed itself into a young man named ShĂȘn Lang, and married Chia YĂŒ, daughter of the Chief Judge of Tâan Chou (Châang-sha Fu, capital of Hunan). The young people lived in rooms below the official apartments. During spring and summer ShĂȘn Lang, as dragons are wont to do, roamed in the rivers and lakes. One day HsĂŒ ChĂȘn-chĂŒn met him, recognized him as a dragon, and knew that he was the cause of the numerous floods which were devastating Kiangsi Province. He determined to find a means of getting rid of him.
ShĂȘn Lang, aware of the steps being taken against him, changed himself into a yellow ox and fled. HsĂŒ ChĂȘn-chĂŒn at once transformed himself into a black ox and Page 224started in pursuit. The yellow ox jumped down a well to hide, but the black ox followed suit. The yellow ox then jumped out again, and escaped to Châang-sha, where he reassumed a human form and lived with Ms wife in the home of his father-in-law, HsĂŒ Sun, returning to the town, hastened to the yamĂȘn, and called to ShĂȘn Lang to come out and show himself, addressing him in a severe tone of voice as follows: âDragon, how dare you hide yourself there under a borrowed form?â ShĂȘn Lang then reassumed the form of a spiritual alligator, and HsĂŒ Sun ordered the spiritual soldiers to kill him. He then commanded his two sons to come out of their abode. By merely spurting a mouthful of water on them he transformed them into young dragons. Chia YĂŒ was told to vacate the rooms with all speed, and in the twinkling of an eye the whole yamĂȘn sank beneath the earth, and there remained nothing but a lake where it had been.
HsĂŒ ChĂȘn-chĂŒn, after his victory over the dragon, assembled the members of his family, to the number of forty-two, on Hsi Shan, outside the city of Nan-châang Fu, and all ascended to Heaven in full daylight, taking with them even the dogs and chickens. He was then 133 years old. This took place on the first day of the eighth moon of the second year (A.D. 374) of the reign-period Ning-Kâang of the reign of the Emperor Hsiao Wu Ti of the Eastern Chin dynasty.
Subsequently a temple was erected to him, and in A.D. 1111 he was canonized as Just Prince, Admirable and Beneficent.
The Great Flood
The repairing of the heavens by NĂŒ Kua, elsewhere alluded to, is also attributed to the following incident. Page 225
Before the Chinese Empire was founded a noble and wonderful queen fought with the chief of the tribes who inhabited the country round about Ă-mei Shan. In a fierce battle the chief and his followers met defeat; raging with anger at being beaten by a woman, he rushed up the mountain-side; the Queen pursued him with her army, and overtook him at the summit; finding no place to hide himself, he attempted in desperation both to wreak vengeance upon his enemies and to end his own life by beating his head violently against the cane of the Heavenly Bamboo which grew there. By his mad battering he at last succeeded in knocking down the towering trunk of the tree, and as he did so its top tore great rents in the canopy of the sky, through which poured great floods of water, inundating the whole earth and drowning all the inhabitants except the victorious Queen and her soldiers. The floods had no power to harm her or her followers, because she herself was an all-powerful divinity and was known as the âMother of the
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