Chinese Ghost Stories

Read Chinese Ghost Stories for Free Online Page B

Book: Read Chinese Ghost Stories for Free Online
Authors: Lafcadio Hearn
Master.”
    And looking, the Emperor perceived that the Golden Tigers upon the wall were visible through the form of Zhenjing; and a strange coldness, like a winter wind, passed through the chamber; and the figure faded out. Then the Emperor knew that the Master of whom his faithful servant had spoken was none other than the Master of Heaven.
    Also at the same hour the gray servant of Zhenjing’s house beheld him passing through the apartments, smiling as he was wont to smile when he saw that all things were as he desired. “Is it well with thee, my lord?” questioned the aged man. And a voice answered him: “It is well”; but the presence of Zhenjing had passed away before the answer came.
    So the armies of the Son of Heaven strove with the rebels. But the land was soaked with blood and blackened with fire; and the corpses of whole populations were carried by the rivers to feed the fishes of the sea; and still the war prevailed through many a long red year. Then came to aid the Son of Heaven the hordes that dwell in the desolations of the West and North—horsemen born, a nation of wild archers, each mighty to bend a two-hundred-pound bow until the ears should meet. And as a whirlwind they came against rebellion, raining raven-feathered arrows in a storm of death; and they prevailed against Xilie and his people. Then those that survived destruction and defeat submitted, and promised allegiance; and once more was the law of righteousness restored. But Zhenjing had been dead for many summers.
    And the Son of Heaven sent word to his victorious generals that they should bring back with them the bones of his faithful servant, to be laid with honor in a mausoleum erected by imperial decree. So the generals of the Celestial and August sought after the nameless grave and found it, and had the earth taken up, and made ready to remove the coffin.
    But the coffin crumbled into dust before their eyes; for the worms had gnawed it, and the hungry earth had devoured its substance, leaving only a phantom shell that vanished at touch of the light. And lo! as it vanished, all beheld lying there the perfect form and features of the good Zhenjing. Corruption had not touched him, nor had the worms disturbed his rest, nor had the bloom of life departed from his face. And he seemed to dream only—comely to see as upon the morning of his bridal, and smiling as the holy images smile, with eyelids closed, in the twilight of the great pagodas.
    Then spoke a priest, standing by the grave: “O my children, this is indeed a Sign from the Master of Heaven; in such wise do the Powers Celestial preserve them that are chosen to be numbered with the Immortals. Death may not prevail over them, neither may corruption come nigh them. Verily the blessed Zhenjing hath taken his place among the divinities of Heaven!”
    Then they bore Zhenjing back to his native place, and laid him with highest honors in the mausoleum which the Emperor had commanded; and there he sleeps, incorruptible forever, arrayed in his robes of state. Upon his tomb are sculptured the emblems of his greatness and his wisdom and his virtue, and the signs of his office, and the Four Precious Things and the monsters which are holy symbols mount giant guard in stone about it; and the weird Dogs of Fo keep watch before it, as before the temples of the gods.
     
     
     

 
     
     
     The Tradition of the Tea Plant
     
     
    SANG A CHINESE HEART FOURTEEN HUNDRED YEARS AGO:
     
    There is Somebody of whom I am thinking.
    Far away there is Somebody of whom I am thinking.
    A hundred leagues of mountains lie between us:
    Yet the same Moon shines upon us, and the passing Wind breathes upon us both.
     
    “Good is the continence of the eye;
    Good it the continence of the ear;
    Good is the continence of the nostrils;
    Good is the continence of the tongue;
    Good is the continence of the body;
    Good is the continence of speech;
    Good is all.…”
     
    A GAIN the Vulture of Temptation soared to the

Similar Books

The Survival Kit

Donna Freitas

LOWCOUNTRY BOOK CLUB

Susan M. Boyer

Love Me Tender

Susan Fox

Watcher's Web

Patty Jansen

The Other Anzacs

Peter Rees

Borrowed Wife

Patrícia Wilson

Shadow Puppets

Orson Scott Card

All That Was Happy

M.M. Wilshire