<h2 class="label">XXXV</h2>
<h2 class="main">HONG’S EXPERIENCES IN HADES</h2></div>
<div class="divBody">
<p class="par first">Hong Nai-pom was a military graduate who was born
in the year <span class="sc">A.D.</span> 1561, and lived in the city of
Pyeng-yang. He passed his examination in the year 1603, and in the year
1637 attained to the Third Degree. He was 82 in the year 1643, and his
son Sonn memorialized the King asking that his father be given rank
appropriate to his age. At that time a certain Han Hong-kil was chief
of the Royal Secretaries, and he refused to pass on the request to his
Majesty; but in the year 1644, when the Crown Prince was returning from
his exile in China, he came by way of Pyeng-yang. Sonn took advantage
of this to present the same request to the Crown Prince. His Highness
received it, and had it brought to the notice of the King. In
consequence, Hong received the rank of Second Degree.</p>
<p class="par">On receiving it he said, “This year I shall
die,” and a little later he died.</p>
<p class="par">In the year 1594, Hong fell ill of typhus fever, and
after ten days of suffering, died. They prepared his body for burial,
and placed it in a coffin. <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e2682"
href="#xd21e2682" name="xd21e2682">184</SPAN>]</span>Then the friends and
relatives left, and his wife remained alone in charge. Of a sudden the
body turned itself and fell with a thud to the ground. The woman,
frightened, fainted away, and the other members of the family came
rushing to her help. From this time on the body resumed its functions,
and Hong lived.</p>
<p class="par">Said he, “In my dream I went to a certain region,
a place of great fear where many persons were standing around, and
awful ogres, some of them wearing bulls’ heads, and some with
faces of wild beasts. They crowded about and jumped and pounced toward
me in all directions. A scribe robed in black sat on a platform and
addressed me, saying, ‘There are three religions on earth,
Confucianism, Buddhism and Taoism. According to Buddhism, you know that
heaven and hell are places that decide between man’s good and
evil deeds. You have ever been a blasphemer of the Buddha, and a denier
of a future life, acting always as though you knew everything,
blustering and storming. You are now to be sent to hell, and ten
thousand kalpas<SPAN class="noteref" id="xd21e2686src" href="#xd21e2686"
name="xd21e2686src">1</SPAN> will not see you out of it.’</p>
<p class="par">“Then two or three constables carrying spears came
and took me off. I screamed, ‘You are wrong, I am innocently
condemned.’ Just at that moment a certain Buddha, with a face of
shining <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e2693" href="#xd21e2693"
name="xd21e2693">185</SPAN>]</span>gold, came smiling toward me, and said,
‘There is truly a mistake somewhere; this man must attain to the
age of eighty-three and become an officer of the Second Degree ere he
dies.’ Then addressing me he asked, ‘How is it that you
have come here? The order was that a certain Hong of Chon-ju be
arrested and brought, not you; but now that you have come, look about
the place before you go, and tell the world afterwards of what you have
seen.’</p>
<p class="par">“The guards, on hearing this, took me in hand and
brought me first to a prison-house, where a sign was posted up, marked,
‘Stirrers up of Strife.’ I saw in this prison a great
brazier-shaped pit, built of stones and filled with fire. Flames arose
and forked tongues. The stirrers up of strife were taken and made to
sit close before it. I then saw one infernal guard take a long rod of
iron, heat it red-hot, and put out the eyes of the guilty ones. I saw
also that the offenders were hung up like dried fish. The guides who
accompanied me, said, ‘While these were on earth they did not
love their brethren, but looked at others as enemies. They scoffed at
the laws of God and sought only selfish gain, so they are
punished.’</p>
<p class="par">“The next hell was marked, ‘Liars.’ In
that hell I saw an iron pillar of several yards in height, and great
stones placed before it. The offenders were called up, and made to
kneel before the pillar. <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e2699" href="#xd21e2699" name="xd21e2699">186</SPAN>]</span>Then I saw an executioner
take a knife and drive a hole through the tongues of the offenders,
pass an iron chain through each, and hang them to the pillar so that
they dangled by their tongues several feet from the ground. A stone was
then taken and tied to each culprit’s feet. The stones thus
bearing down, and the chains being fast to the pillar, their tongues
were pulled out a foot or more, and their eyes rolled in their sockets.
Their agonies were appalling. The guides again said, ‘These
offenders when on earth used their tongues skilfully to tell lies and
to separate friend from friend, and so they are punished.’</p>
<p class="par">“The next hell had inscribed on it,
‘Deceivers.’ I saw in it many scores of people. There were
ogres that cut the flesh from their bodies, and fed it to starving
demons. These ate and ate, and the flesh was cut and cut till only the
bones remained. When the winds of hell blew, flesh returned to them;
then metal snakes and copper dogs crowded in to bite them and suck
their blood. Their screams of pain made the earth to tremble. The
guides said to me, ‘When these offenders were on earth they held
high office, and while they pretended to be true and good they received
bribes in secret and were doers of all evil. As Ministers of State they
ate the fat of the land and sucked the blood of the people, and yet
advertised themselves <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e2703" href="#xd21e2703" name="xd21e2703">187</SPAN>]</span>as benefactors and were
highly applauded. While in reality they lived as thieves, they
pretended to be holy, as Confucius and Mencius are holy. They were
deceivers of the world, and robbers, and so are punished
thus.’</p>
<p class="par">“The guides then said, ‘It is not necessary
that you see all the hells.’ They said to one another,
‘Let’s take him yonder and show him;’ so they went
some distance to the south-east. There was a great house with a sign
painted thus, ‘The Home of the Blessed.’ As I looked, there
were beautiful haloes encircling it, and clouds of glory. There were
hundreds of priests in cassock and surplice. Some carried fresh-blown
lotus flowers; some were seated like the Buddha; some were reading
prayers.</p>
<p class="par">“The guides said, ‘These when on earth kept
the faith, and with undivided hearts served the Buddha, and so have
escaped the Eight Sorrows and the Ten Punishments, and are now in the
home of the happy, which is called heaven.’ When we had seen all
these things we returned.</p>
<p class="par">“The golden-faced Buddha said to me, ‘Not
many on earth believe in the Buddha, and few know of heaven and hell.
What do you think of it?’</p>
<p class="par">“I bowed low and thanked him.</p>
<p class="par">“Then the black-coated scribe said, ‘I am
sending this man away; see him safely off.’ The spirit soldiers
took me with them, and while on the <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name=
"xd21e2716" href="#xd21e2716" name="xd21e2716">188</SPAN>]</span>way I
awakened with a start, and found that I had been dead for four
days.”</p>
<p class="par">Hong’s mind was filled with pride on this account,
and he frequently boasted of it. His age and Second Degree of rank came
about just as the Buddha had predicted.</p>
<p class="par">His experience, alas! was used as a means to deceive
people, for the Superior Man does not talk of these strange and
wonderful things.</p>
<p class="par">Yi Tan, a Chinaman of the Song Kingdom, used to say,
“If there is no heaven, there is no heaven, but if there is one,
the Superior Man alone can attain to it. If there is no hell, there is
no hell, but if there is one the bad man must inherit it.”</p>
<p class="par">If we examine Hong’s story, while it looks like a
yarn to deceive the world, it really is a story to arouse one to right
action. I, Im Bang, have recorded it like Toi-chi, saying,
“Don’t find fault with the story, but learn its
lesson.”</p>
<p class="par signed"><span class="sc">Im Bang.</span> <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e2730" href="#xd21e2730" name=
"xd21e2730">189</SPAN>]</span></p>
</div>
<div class="footnotes">
<hr class="fnsep">
<p class="par footnote"><span class="label"><SPAN class="noteref" id="xd21e2686" href="#xd21e2686src" name="xd21e2686">1</SPAN></span>
<i>Kalpa</i> means a Buddhistic age. <SPAN class="fnarrow" href="#xd21e2686src">↑</SPAN></p>
</div>
</div>
<div id="ch36" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pagenum">[<SPAN href="#xd21e538">Contents</SPAN>]</span>
<div class="divHead">
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />