<h2><SPAN name="chapter-21"><abbr title="Twenty-One">XXI.</abbr> <br/> THE MAGNANIMOUS GIRL.</SPAN></h2>
<p><span class="smallcaps">At</span> Chin-ling there lived a young man named Ku,
who had considerable ability but was very poor; and
having an old mother, he was very loth to leave home.
So he employed himself in writing or painting for
people, and gave his mother the proceeds, going on
thus till he was twenty-five years of age without taking
a wife. Opposite to their house was another building,
which had long been untenanted; and one day an old
woman and a young girl came to occupy it, but there
being no gentleman with them young Ku did not
make any inquiries as to who they were or whence
they hailed. Shortly afterwards it chanced that just
as Ku was entering the house he observed a young
lady come out of his mother's door. She was about
<span class="pagenum" title="161"><SPAN name="Page_161"></SPAN></span>
eighteen or nineteen, very clever and refined looking, and
altogether such a girl as one rarely sets eyes on; and when
she noticed Mr. Ku, she did not run away, but seemed
quite self-possessed. “It was the young lady over the
way; she came to borrow my scissors and measure,” said
his mother, “and she told me that there was only her
mother and herself. They don't seem to belong to the
lower classes. I asked her why she didn't get married,
to which she replied that her mother was old. I must
go and call on her to-morrow, and find out how the
land lies. If she doesn't expect too much, you could
take care of her mother for her.” So next day Ku's
mother went, and found that the girl's mother was
deaf, and that they were evidently poor, apparently not
having a day's food in the house. Ku's mother asked
what their employment was, and the old lady said they
trusted for food to her daughter's ten fingers. She
then threw out some hints about uniting the two
families, to which the old lady seemed to agree; but,
on consultation with her daughter, the latter would not
consent. Mrs. Ku returned home and told her son,
saying, “Perhaps she thinks we are too poor. She
doesn't speak or laugh, is very nice-looking, and as
pure as snow; truly no ordinary girl.” There ended
that; until one day, as Ku was sitting in his study,
up came a very agreeable young fellow, who said he
was from a neighbouring village, and engaged Ku to
draw a picture for him. The two youths soon struck
up a firm friendship and met constantly, when it happened
that the stranger chanced to see the young
<span class="pagenum" title="162"><SPAN name="Page_162"></SPAN></span>
lady of over the way. “Who is that?” said he, following
her with his eyes. Ku told him, and then he
said, “She is certainly pretty, but rather stern in her
appearance.” By-and-by Ku went in, and his mother
told him the girl had come to beg a little rice, as they had
had nothing to eat all day. “She's a good daughter,”
said his mother, “and I'm very sorry for her. We
must try and help them a little.” Ku thereupon
shouldered a peck of rice, and, knocking at their door,
presented it with his mother's compliments. The young
lady received the rice but said nothing; and then she
got into the habit of coming over and helping Ku's
mother with her work and household affairs, almost as
if she had been her daughter-in-law, for which Ku was
very grateful to her, and whenever he had anything nice
he always sent some of it in to her mother, though the
young lady herself never once took the trouble to thank
him. So things went on until Ku's mother got an
abscess on her leg, and lay writhing in agony day and
night. Then the young lady devoted herself to the
invalid, waiting on her and giving her medicine with
such care and attention that at last the sick woman
cried out, “Oh, that I could secure such a daughter-in-law
as you, to see this old body into its grave!” The
young lady soothed her, and replied, “Your son is a
hundred times more filial than I, a poor widow's only
daughter.” “But even a filial son makes a bad nurse,”
answered the patient; “besides, I am now drawing
towards the evening of my life, when my body will be
exposed to the mists and the dews, and I am vexed in
<span class="pagenum" title="163"><SPAN name="Page_163"></SPAN></span>
spirit about our ancestral worship and the continuance
of our line.” As she was speaking Ku walked in; and
his mother, weeping, said, “I am deeply indebted to
this young lady; do not forget to repay her goodness.”
Ku made a low bow, but the young lady said, “Sir,
when you were kind to my mother, I did not thank
you; why, then, thank me?” Ku thereupon became
more than ever attached to her; but could never get
her to depart in the slightest degree from her cold
demeanour towards himself. One day, however, he
managed to squeeze her hand, upon which she told
him never to do so again; and then for some time he
neither saw nor heard anything of her. She had conceived
a violent dislike to the young stranger above-mentioned;
and one evening when he was sitting
talking with Ku, the young lady reappeared. After a
while she got angry at something he said, and drew from
her robe a glittering knife about a foot long. The
young man, seeing her do this, ran out in a fright and
she after him, only to find that he had vanished. She
then threw her dagger up into the air, and whish! a
streak of light like a rainbow, and something came
tumbling down with a flop. Ku got a light, and ran to
see what it was; and lo! there lay a white fox, head
in one place and body in another. “There is your
<em>friend</em>,” cried the girl; “I knew he would cause me to
destroy him sooner or later.” Ku dragged it into the
house, and said, “Let us wait till to-morrow to talk it
over; we shall then be more calm.” Next day the
young lady arrived, and Ku inquired about her knowledge
<span class="pagenum" title="164"><SPAN name="Page_164"></SPAN></span>
of the black art; but she told Ku not to trouble
himself about such affairs, and to keep it secret or it
might be prejudicial to his happiness. Ku then entreated
her to consent to their union, to which she
replied that she had already been as it were a daughter-in-law
to his mother, and there was no need to push
the thing further. “Is it because I am poor?” asked
Ku. “Well, I am not rich,” answered she, “but the
fact is I had rather not.” She then took her leave, and
the next evening when Ku went across to their house to
try once more to persuade her, the young lady had disappeared,
and was never seen again.</p>
<p class="pagenum-h-p"><span class="pagenum" title="165"><SPAN name="Page_165"></SPAN></span></p>
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