<h2 class="label">I</h2>
<h2 class="main">CHARAN</h2></div>
<div class="divBody">
<p class="par first">[Some think that love, strong, true, and
self-sacrificing, is not to be found in the Orient; but the story of
Charan, which comes down four hundred years and more, proves the
contrary, for it still has the fresh, sweet flavour of a romance of
yesterday; albeit the setting of the East provides an odd and
interesting background.]</p>
<hr class="tb">
<p class="par"></p>
<p class="par">In the days of King Sung-jong (<span class="sc">A.D.</span> 1488–1495) one of Korea’s noted men became
governor of Pyong-an Province. Now Pyong-an stands first of all the
eight provinces in the attainments of erudition and polite society.
Many of her <i>literati</i> are good musicians, and show ability in the
affairs of State. <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e737" href="#xd21e737" name="xd21e737">14</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p class="par">At the time of this story there was a famous dancing
girl in Pyong-an whose name was Charan. She was very beautiful, and
sang and danced to the delight of all beholders. Her ability, too, was
specially marked, for she understood the classics and was acquainted
with history. The brightest of all the <i>geisha</i> was she, famous
and far-renowned.</p>
<p class="par">The Governor’s family consisted of a son, whose
age was sixteen, and whose face was comely as a picture. Though so
young, he was thoroughly grounded in Chinese, and was a gifted scholar.
His judgment was excellent, and he had a fine appreciation of literary
form, so that the moment he lifted his pen the written line took on
admirable expression. His name became known as Keydong (The Gifted
Lad). The Governor had no other children, neither son nor daughter, so
his heart was wrapped up in this boy. On his birthday he had all the
officials invited and other special guests, who came to drink his
health. There were present also a company of dancing-girls and a large
band of musicians. The Governor, during a lull in the banquet, called
his son to him, and ordered the chief of the dancing-girls to choose
one of the prettiest of their number, that he and she might dance
together and delight the assembled guests. On hearing this, the
company, with one accord, called for Charan, <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e745" href="#xd21e745" name=
"xd21e745">15</SPAN>]</span>as the one suited by her talents, attainments
and age to be a fitting partner for his son. They came out and danced
like fairies, graceful as the wavings of the willow, light and airy as
the swallow. All who saw them were charmed. The Governor, too, greatly
pleased, called Charan to him, had her sit on the dais, treated her to
a share in the banquet, gave her a present of silk, and commanded that
from that day forth she be the special dancing maiden to attend upon
his son.</p>
<p class="par">From this birthday forth they became fast friends
together. They thought the world of each other. More than all the
delightful stories of history was their love—such as had never
been seen.</p>
<p class="par">The Governor’s term of office was extended for six
years more, and so they remained in the north country. Finally, at the
time of return, he and his wife were in great anxiety over their son
being separated from Charan. If they were to force them to separate,
they feared he would die of a broken heart. If they took her with them,
she not being his wife, they feared for his reputation. They could not
possibly decide, so they concluded to refer the matter to the son
himself. They called him and said, “Even parents cannot decide as
to the love of their son for a maiden. What ought we to do? You love
Charan so that it will be very hard for you to part, and yet to have a
dancing-girl before <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e751" href="#xd21e751" name="xd21e751">16</SPAN>]</span>you are married is not good
form, and will interfere with your marriage prospects and promotion.
However, the having of a second wife is a common custom in Korea, and
one that the world recognizes. Do as you think best in the
matter.” The son replied, “There is no difficulty; when she
is before my eyes, of course she is everything, but when the time comes
for me to start for home she will be like a pair of worn shoes, set
aside; so please do not be anxious.”</p>
<p class="par">The Governor and his wife were greatly delighted, and
said he was a “superior man” indeed.</p>
<p class="par">When the time came to part Charan cried bitterly, so
that those standing by could not bear to look at her; but the son
showed not the slightest sign of emotion. Those looking on were filled
with wonder at his fortitude. Although he had already loved Charan for
six years, he had never been separated from her for a single day, so he
knew not what it meant to say Good-bye, nor did he know how it felt to
be parted.</p>
<p class="par">The Governor returned to Seoul to fill the office of
Chief Justice, and the son came also. After this return thoughts of
love for Charan possessed Keydong, though he never expressed them in
word or manner. It was almost the time of the <i>Kam-see</i>
Examination. The father, therefore, ordered his son to go with some of
his friends to a neighbouring <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e763"
href="#xd21e763" name="xd21e763">17</SPAN>]</span>monastery to study and
prepare. They went, and one night, after the day’s work was over
and all were asleep, the young man stole out into the courtyard. It was
winter, with frost and snow and a cold, clear moon. The mountains were
deep and the world was quiet, so that the slightest sound could be
heard. The young man looked up at the moon and his thoughts were full
of sorrow. He so wished to see Charan that he could no longer control
himself, and fearing that he would lose his reason, he decided that
very night to set out for far-distant Pyong-an. He had on a fur
head-dress, a thick coat, a leather belt and a heavy pair of shoes.
When he had gone less than ten <i>lee</i>, however, his feet were
blistered, and he had to go into a neighbouring village and change his
leather shoes for straw sandals, and his expensive head-cover for an
ordinary servant’s hat. He went thus on his way, begging as he
went. He was often very hungry, and when night came, was very, very
cold. He was a rich man’s son and had always dressed in silk and
eaten dainty fare, and had never in his life walked more than a few
feet from his father’s door. Now there lay before him a journey
of hundreds of miles. He went stumbling along through the snow, making
but poor progress. Hungry, and frozen nearly to death, he had never
known such suffering before. His clothes were <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e768" href="#xd21e768" name=
"xd21e768">18</SPAN>]</span>torn and his face became worn down and
blackened till he looked like a goblin. Still on he went, little by
little, day after day, till at last, when a whole month had gone by, he
reached Pyong-an.</p>
<p class="par">Straight to Charan’s home he went, but Charan was
not there, only her mother. She looked at him, but did not recognize
him. He said he was the former Governor’s son and that out of
love for Charan he had walked five hundred <i>lee</i>. “Where is
she?” he asked. The mother heard, but instead of being pleased
was very angry. She said, “My daughter is now with the son of the
new Governor, and I never see her at all; she never comes home, and she
has been away for two or three months. Even though you have made this
long journey there is no possible way to meet her.”</p>
<p class="par">She did not invite him in, so cold was her welcome. He
thought to himself, “I came to see Charan, but she is not here.
Her mother refuses me; I cannot go back, and I cannot stay. What shall
I do?” While thus in this dilemma a plan occurred to him. There
was a scribe in Pyong-an, who, during his father’s term of
office, had offended, and was sentenced to death. There were
extenuating circumstances, however, and he, when he went to pay his
morning salutations, had besought and secured his pardon. His father,
out of regard for his son’s petition, had forgiven the
<span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e777" href="#xd21e777" name=
"xd21e777">19</SPAN>]</span>scribe. He thought, “I was the means of
saving the man’s life, he will take me in;” so he went
straight from Charan’s to the house of the scribe. But at first
this writer did not recognize him. When he gave his name and told who
he was, the scribe gave a great start, and fell at his feet making
obeisance. He cleared out an inner room and made him comfortable,
prepared dainty fare and treated him with all respect.</p>
<p class="par">A little later he talked over with his host the
possibility of his meeting Charan. The scribe said, “I am afraid
that there is no way for you to meet her alone, but if you would like
to see even her face, I think I can manage it. Will you
consent?”</p>
<p class="par">He asked as to the plan. It was this: It being now a
time of snow, daily coolies were called to sweep it away from the inner
court of the Governor’s <i>yamen</i>, and just now the scribe was
in charge of this particular work. Said he, “If you will join the
sweepers, take a broom and go in; you will no doubt catch a glimpse of
Charan as she is said to be in the Hill Kiosk. I know of no other
plan.”</p>
<p class="par">Keydong consented. In the early morning he mixed with
the company of sweepers and went with his broom into the inner
enclosure, where the Hill Kiosk was, and so they worked at sweeping.
Just then the Governor’s son was sitting by the open window and
Charan was by him, but not visible <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name=
"xd21e788" href="#xd21e788" name="xd21e788">20</SPAN>]</span>from the
outside. The other workers, being all practised hands, swept well;
Keydong alone handled his broom to no advantage, knowing not how to
sweep. The Governor’s son, watching the process, looked out and
laughed, called Charan and invited her to see this sweeper. Charan
stepped out into the open hall and the sweeper raised his eyes to see.
She glanced at him but once, and but for a moment, then turned quickly,
went into the room, and shut the door, not appearing again, to the
disappointment of the sweeper, who came back in despair to the
scribe’s house.</p>
<p class="par">Charan was first of all a wise and highly gifted woman.
One look had told her who the sweeper was. She came back into the room
and began to cry. The Governor’s son looked in surprise and
displeasure, and asked, “Why do you cry?” She did not reply
at once, but after two or three insistent demands told the reason thus:
“I am a low class woman; you are mistaken in thinking highly of
me, or counting me of worth. Already I have not been home for two whole
months and more. This is a special compliment and a high honour, and so
there is not the slightest reason for any complaint on my part. But
still, I think of my home, which is poor, and my mother. It is
customary on the anniversary of my father’s death to prepare food
from the official quarters, and offer a sacrifice to his spirit,
<span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e792" href="#xd21e792" name=
"xd21e792">21</SPAN>]</span>but here I am imprisoned and to-morrow is the
sacrificial day. I fear that not a single act of devotion will be paid,
I am disturbed over it, and that’s why I cry.”</p>
<p class="par">The Governor’s son was so taken in by this fair
statement that he trusted her fully and without a question.
Sympathetically he asked, “Why didn’t you tell me
before?” He prepared the food and told her to hurry home and
carry out the ceremony. So Charan came like flaming fire back to her
house, and said to her mother, “Keydong has come and I have seen
him. Is he not here? Tell me where he is if you know.” The mother
said, “He came here, it is true, all the way on foot to see you,
but I told him that you were in the <i>yamen</i> and that there was no
possible way for you to meet, so he went away and where he is I know
not.”</p>
<p class="par">Then Charan broke down and began to cry. “Oh, my
mother, why had you the heart to do so cruelly?” she sobbed.
“As far as I am concerned I can never break with him nor give him
up. We were each sixteen when chosen to dance together, and while it
may be said that men chose us, it is truer still to say that God hath
chosen. We grew into each other’s lives, and there was never such
love as ours. Though he forgot and left me, I can never forget and can
never give him up. The Governor, too, called me the beloved wife of his
<span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e801" href="#xd21e801" name=
"xd21e801">22</SPAN>]</span>son, and did not once refer to my low station.
He cherished me and gave me many gifts. ’Twas all like heaven and
not like earth. To the city of Pyong-an gentry and officials gather as
men crowd into a boat; I have seen so many, but for grace and ability
no one was ever like Keydong. I must find him, and even though he casts
me aside I never shall forget him. I have not kept myself even unto
death as I should have, because I have been under the power and
influence of the Governor. How could he ever have come so far for one
so low and vile? He, a gentleman of the highest birth, for the sake of
a wretched dancing-girl has endured all this hardship and come so far.
Could you not have thought, mother, of these things and given him at
least some kindly welcome? Could my heart be other than broken?”
And a great flow of tears came from Charan’s eyes. She thought
and thought as to where he could possibly be. “I know of no
place,” said she, “unless it be at such and such a
scribe’s home.” Quick as thought she flew thence, and there
they met. They clasped each other and cried, not a word was spoken.
Thus came they back to Charan’s home side by side. When it was
night Charan said, “When to-morrow comes we shall have to part.
What shall we do?” They talked it over, and agreed to make their
escape that night. So Charan <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e803"
href="#xd21e803" name="xd21e803">23</SPAN>]</span>got together her
clothing, and her treasures and jewels, and made two bundles, and thus,
he carrying his on his back and she hers on her head, away they went
while the city slept. They followed the road that leads toward the
mountains that lie between Yang-tok and Maing-san counties. There they
found a country house, where they put up, and where the
Governor’s son became a sort of better-class servant. He did not
know how to do anything well, but Charan understood weaving and sewing,
and so they lived. After some time they got a little thatched hut by
themselves in the village and lived there. Charan was a beautiful
sewing-woman, and ceased not day and night to ply her needle, and sold
her treasures and her jewels to make ends meet. Charan, too, knew how
to make friends, and was praised and loved by all the village.
Everybody felt sorry for the hard times that had befallen this
mysterious young couple, and helped them so that the days passed
peacefully and happily together.</p>
<p class="par">To return in the story: On awaking in the morning in the
temple where he and his friends had gone to study, they found Keydong
missing. All was in a state of confusion as to what had become of the
son of the Chief Justice. They hunted for him far and wide, but he was
nowhere to be found, so word was sent to the parents accordingly. There
<span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e807" href="#xd21e807" name=
"xd21e807">24</SPAN>]</span>was untold consternation in the home of the
former governor. So great a loss, what could equal it? They searched
the country about the temple, but no trace or shadow of him was to be
found. Some said they thought he had been inveigled away and
metamorphosed by the fox; others that he had been eaten by the tiger.
The parents decided that he was dead and went into mourning for him,
burning his clothing in a sacrificial fire.</p>
<p class="par">In Pyong-an the Governor’s son, when he found that
he had lost Charan, had Charan’s mother imprisoned and all the
relatives, but after a month or so, when the search proved futile, he
gave up the matter and let them go.</p>
<p class="par">Charan, at last happy with her chosen one, said one day
to him, “You, a son of the gentry, for the sake of a dancing-girl
have given up parents and home to live in this hidden corner of the
hills. It is a matter, too, that touches your filial piety, this
leaving your father and mother in doubt as to whether you are alive or
not. They ought to know. We cannot live here all our lives, neither can
we return home; what do you think we ought to do?” Keydong made a
hopeless reply. “I am in distress,” said he, “and
know not.”</p>
<p class="par">Charan said brightly, “I have a plan by which we
can cover over the faults of the past, and win a new start for the
future. By means of it, you can <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e816"
href="#xd21e816" name="xd21e816">25</SPAN>]</span>serve your parents and
look the world in the face. Will you consent?”</p>
<p class="par">“What do you propose?” asked he. Her reply
was, “There is only one way, and that is by means of the Official
Examination. I know of no other. You will understand what I mean, even
though I do not tell you more.”</p>
<p class="par">He said, “Enough, your plan is just the thing to
help us out. But how can I get hold of the books I need?”</p>
<p class="par">Charan replied, “Don’t be anxious about
that, I’ll get the books.” From that day forth she sent
through all the neighbourhood for books, to be secured at all costs;
but there were few or none, it being a mountain village. One day there
came by, all unexpectedly, a pack-peddler, who had in his bundle a book
that he wished to sell. Some of the village people wanted to buy it for
wall-paper. Charan, however, secured it first and showed it to Keydong.
It was none other than a special work for Examinations, with all the
exercises written out. It was written in small characters, and was a
huge book containing several thousand exercises. Keydong was delighted,
and said, “This is enough for all needed preparation.” She
bought it and gave it to him, and there he pegged away day after day.
In the night he studied by candle-light, while she sat by his side and
did silk-spinning. Thus they <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e824"
href="#xd21e824" name="xd21e824">26</SPAN>]</span>shared the light
together. If he showed any remissness, Charan urged him on, and thus
they worked for two years. To begin with, he, being a highly talented
scholar, made steady advancement day by day. He was a beautiful writer
and a master of the pen. His compositions, too, were without a peer,
and every indication pointed to his winning the highest place in the
<i>Kwago</i> (Examination).</p>
<p class="par">At this time a proclamation was issued that there would
be a special examination held before His Majesty the King, so Charan
made ready the food required and all necessaries for him to go afoot to
Seoul to try his hand.</p>
<p class="par">At last here he was, within the Palace enclosure. His
Majesty came out into the examination arena and posted up the subject.
Keydong took his pen and wrote his finished composition. Under the
inspiration of the moment his lines came forth like bubbling water. It
was finished.</p>
<p class="par">When the announcement was made as to the winner, the
King ordered the sealed name of the writer to be opened. It was, and
they found that Keydong was first. At that time his father was Prime
Minister and waiting in attendance upon the King. The King called the
Prime Minister, and said, “It looks to me as though the winner
was your son, but he writes that his father is Chief Justice and not
Prime Minister; what can that <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e835"
href="#xd21e835" name="xd21e835">27</SPAN>]</span>mean?” He handed
the composition paper to the father, and asked him to look and see. The
Minister gazed at it in wonder, burst into tears, and said, “It
is your servant’s son. Three years ago he went with some friends
to a monastery to study, but one night he disappeared, and though I
searched far and wide I have had no word of him since. I concluded that
he had been destroyed by some wild animal, so I had a funeral service
held and the house went into mourning. I had no other children but this
son only. He was greatly gifted and I lost him in this strange way. The
memory has never left me, for it seems as though I had lost him but
yesterday. Now that I look at this paper I see indeed that it is the
writing of my son. When I lost him I was Chief Justice, and thus he
records the office; but where he has been for these three years, and
how he comes now to take part in the examination, I know
not.”</p>
<p class="par">The King, hearing this, was greatly astonished, and at
once before all the assembled ministers had him called. Thus he came in
his scholar’s dress into the presence of the King. All the
officials wondered at this summoning of a candidate before the
announcement of the result. The King asked him why he had left the
monastery and where he had been for these three years. He bowed low,
and said, “I have been a very wicked man, have <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e839" href="#xd21e839" name=
"xd21e839">28</SPAN>]</span>left my parents, have broken all the laws of
filial devotion, and deserve condign punishment.” The King
replied, saying, “There is no law of concealment before the King.
I shall not condemn you even though you are guilty; tell me all.”
Then he told his story to the King. All the officials on each side bent
their ears to hear. The King sighed, and said to the father,
“Your son has repented and made amends for his fault. He has won
first place and now stands as a member of the Court. We cannot condemn
him for his love for this woman. Forgive him for all the past and give
him a start for the future.” His Majesty said further, “The
woman Charan, who has shared your life in the lonely mountains, is no
common woman. Her plans, too, for your restoration were the plans of a
master hand. She is no dancing-girl, this Charan. Let no other be your
lawful wife but she only; let her be raised to equal rank with her
husband, and let her children and her children’s children hold
highest office in the realm.” So was Keydong honoured with the
winner’s crown, and so the Prime Minister received his son back
to life at the hands of the King. The winner’s cap was placed
upon his head, and the whole house was whirled into raptures of
joy.</p>
<p class="par">So the Minister sent forth a palanquin and servants to
bring up Charan. In a great festival <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name=
"xd21e843" href="#xd21e843" name="xd21e843">29</SPAN>]</span>of joy she
was proclaimed the wife of the Minister’s son. Later he became
one of Korea’s first men of State, and they lived their happy
life to a good old age. They had two sons, both graduates and men who
held high office.</p>
<p class="par signed"><span class="sc">Im Bang.</span> <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e849" href="#xd21e849" name=
"xd21e849">30</SPAN>]</span></p>
</div>
</div>
<div id="ch2" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pagenum">[<SPAN href="#xd21e228">Contents</SPAN>]</span>
<div class="divHead">
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />