<h2><SPAN name="chapter-30"><abbr title="Thirty">XXX.</abbr> <br/> THE TIGER OF CHAO-CH'ÊNG.</SPAN></h2>
<p><span class="smallcaps">At</span> Chao-ch'êng there lived an old woman more than
seventy years of age, who had an only son. One day
he went up to the hills and was eaten by a tiger, at
which his mother was so overwhelmed with grief that
she hardly wished to live. With tears and lamentations
she ran and told her story to the magistrate of the
place, who laughed and asked her how she thought the
law could be brought to bear on a tiger. But the old
woman would not be comforted, and at length the
magistrate lost his temper and bade her begone. Of
this, however, she took no notice; and then the magistrate,
in compassion for her great age and unwilling to
resort to extremities, promised her that he would have
the tiger arrested. Even then she would not go until the
warrant had been actually issued; so the magistrate, at
a loss what to do, asked his attendants which of them
would undertake the job. Upon this one of them,
<span class="pagenum" title="220"><SPAN name="Page_220"></SPAN></span>
Li Nêng, who happened to be gloriously drunk, stepped
forward and said that he would; whereupon the warrant
was immediately issued and the old woman went away.
When our friend, Li Nêng, got sober, he was sorry for
what he had done; but reflecting that the whole thing
was a mere trick of his master's to get rid of the old
woman's importunities, did not trouble himself much
about it, handing in the warrant as if the arrest had
been made. “Not so,” cried the magistrate, “you said
you could do this, and now I shall not let you off.”
Li Nêng was at his wits' end, and begged that he
might be allowed to impress the hunters of the district.
<span class="pagenum" title="221"><SPAN name="Page_221"></SPAN></span>
This was conceded; so collecting together these men,
he proceeded to spend day and night among the hills
in the hope of catching a tiger, and thus making a show
of having fulfilled his duty.</p>
<p>A month passed away, during which he received
several hundred blows with the bamboo, and at length,
in despair, he betook himself to the Ch'êng-huang
temple in the eastern suburb, where, falling on his
knees, he prayed and wept by turns. By-and-by a
tiger walked in, and Li Nêng, in a great fright, thought
he was going to be eaten alive. But the tiger took no
notice of anything, remaining seated in the doorway.
Li Nêng then addressed the animal as follows:—“O
tiger, if thou didst slay that old woman's son, suffer
me to bind thee with this cord;” and, drawing a
rope from his pocket, threw it over the animal's neck.
The tiger drooped its ears, and allowing itself to be
<span class="pagenum" title="222"><SPAN name="Page_222"></SPAN></span>
bound, followed Li Nêng to the magistrate's office.
The latter then asked it, saying, “Did you eat the old
woman's son?” to which the tiger replied by nodding
its head; whereupon the magistrate rejoined, “That
murderers should suffer death has ever been the law.
Besides, this old woman had but one son, and by
killing him you took from her the sole support of her
declining years. But if now you will be as a son to
her, your crime shall be pardoned.” The tiger again
nodded assent, and accordingly the magistrate gave
orders that he should be released, at which the old
woman was highly incensed, thinking that the tiger
ought to have paid with its life for the destruction of
her son.</p>
<p>Next morning, however, when she opened the door
of her cottage, there lay a dead deer before it; and
the old woman, by selling the flesh and skin, was able
to purchase food. From that day this became a
common event, and sometimes the tiger would even
bring her money and valuables, so that she became
quite rich, and was much better cared for than she had
been even by her own son. Consequently, she became
very well-disposed to the tiger, which often came and
slept in the verandah, remaining for a whole day at a
time, and giving no cause of fear either to man or
beast. In a few years the old woman died, upon
<span class="pagenum" title="223"><SPAN name="Page_223"></SPAN></span>
which the tiger walked in and roared its lamentations
in the hall. However, with all the money she had
saved, she was able to have a splendid funeral; and
while her relatives were standing round the grave, out
rushed a tiger, and sent them all running away in fear.
But the tiger merely went up to the mound, and, after
roaring like a thunder-peal, disappeared again. Then
the people of that place built a shrine in honour of the
Faithful Tiger, and it remains there to this day.</p>
<p class="pagenum-h-p"><span class="pagenum" title="224"><SPAN name="Page_224"></SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />