<h2><SPAN name="chapter-54"><abbr title="Fifty-Four">LIV.</abbr> <br/> THE MAN WHO WAS THROWN DOWN A WELL.</SPAN></h2>
<p><span class="smallcaps">Mr. Tai</span>, of An-ch'ing, was a wild fellow when young.
One day as he was returning home tipsy, he met by the
way a dead cousin of his named Chi; and having, in his
drunken state, quite forgotten that his cousin was dead,
he asked him where he was going. “I am already a
disembodied spirit,” replied Chi; “don't you remember?”
Tai was a little disturbed at this; but, being
<span class="pagenum" title="366"><SPAN name="Page_366"></SPAN></span>
under the influence of liquor, he was not frightened, and
inquired of his cousin what he was doing in the realms
below. “I am employed as scribe,” said Chi, “in the
court of the Great King.” “Then you must know all
about our happiness and misfortunes to come,” cried
Tai. “It is my business,” answered his cousin, “so of
course I know. But I see such an enormous mass that,
unless of special reference to myself or family, I take
no notice of any of it. Three days ago, by the way,
I saw your name in the register.” Tai immediately
asked what there was about himself, and his cousin
replied, “I will not deceive you; your name was
put down for a dark and dismal hell.” Tai was
dreadfully alarmed, and at the same time sobered, and
entreated his cousin to assist him in some way. “You
may try,” said Chi, “what merit will do for you as a
means of mitigating your punishment; but the register
of your sins is as thick as my finger, and nothing short
of the most deserving acts will be of any avail. What
can a poor fellow like myself do for you? Were you to
perform one good act every day, you would not complete
the necessary total under a year and more, and it is now
too late for that. But henceforth amend your ways, and
there may still be a chance of escape for you.” When
Tai heard these words he prostrated himself on the
ground, imploring his cousin to help him; but, on raising
his head, Chi had disappeared; he therefore returned
sorrowfully home, and set to work to cleanse his heart
and order his behaviour.</p>
<p>Now Tai's next door neighbour had long suspected
<span class="pagenum" title="367"><SPAN name="Page_367"></SPAN></span>
him of paying too much attention to his wife; and one
day meeting Tai in the fields shortly after the events
narrated above, he inveigled him into inspecting a dry
well, and then pushed him down. The well was many
feet deep, and the man felt certain that Tai was killed;
however, in the middle of the night he came round, and
sitting up at the bottom, he began to shout for assistance,
but could not make any one hear him. On the following
day, the neighbour, fearing that Tai might possibly have
recovered consciousness, went to listen at the mouth of
the well; and hearing him cry out for help, began to
throw down a quantity of stones. Tai took refuge in a
cave at the side, and did not dare utter another sound;
but his enemy knew he was not dead, and forthwith
filled the well almost up to the top with earth. In the
cave it was as dark as pitch, exactly like the Infernal
Regions; and not being able to get anything to eat or
drink, Tai gave up all hopes of life. He crawled on his
hands and knees further into the cave, but was prevented
by water from going further than a few paces, and
returned to take up his position at the old spot. At first
he felt hungry; by-and-by, however, this sensation passed
away; and then reflecting that there, at the bottom of a
well, he could hardly perform any good action, he passed
his time in calling loudly on the name of Buddha.
<span class="pagenum" title="368"><SPAN name="Page_368"></SPAN></span>
Before long he saw a number of Will-o'-the-Wisps
flitting over the water and illuminating the gloom of the
cave; and immediately prayed to them, saying, “O
Will-o'-the-Wisps, I have heard that ye are the shades of
wronged and injured people. I have not long to live,
and am without hope of escape; still I would gladly
relieve the monotony of my situation by exchanging a
few words with you.” Thereupon, all the Wills came
flitting across the water to him; and among them was a
man of about half the ordinary size. Tai asked him
whence he came; to which he replied, “This is an old
coal-mine. The proprietor, in working the coal, disturbed
the position of some graves; and Mr. Lung-fei
flooded the mine and drowned forty-three workmen.
We are the shades of those men.” He further said he
did not know who Mr. Lung-fei was, except that he was
secretary to the City God, and that in compassion for the
misfortunes of the innocent workmen, he was in the
habit of sending them a quantity of gruel every three or
four days. “But the cold water,” added he, “soaks
into our bones, and there is but small chance of ever
getting them removed. If, Sir, you some day return to
the world above, I pray you fish up our decaying bones
and bury them in some public burying-ground. You
will thus earn for yourself boundless gratitude in the
<span class="pagenum" title="369"><SPAN name="Page_369"></SPAN></span>
realms below.” Tai promised that if he had the luck to
escape he would do as they wished; “but how,” cried
he, “situated as I am, can I ever hope to look again
upon the light of day?” He then began to teach the
Wills to say their prayers, making for them beads out
of bits of mud, and repeating to them the liturgies of
Buddha. He could not tell night from morning; he
slept when he felt tired, and when he waked he sat up.
Suddenly, he perceived in the distance the light of
lamps, at which the shades all rejoiced, and said, “It is
Mr. Lung-fei with our food.” They then invited Tai to
go with them; and when he said he couldn't because of
the water, they bore him along over it so that he hardly
seemed to walk. After twisting and turning about for
nearly a quarter of a mile, he reached a place at which
the Wills bade him walk by himself; and then he appeared
to mount a flight of steps, at the top of which he
found himself in an apartment lighted by a candle as
thick round as one's arm. Not having seen the light of
fire for some time, he was overjoyed and walked in; but
observing an old man in a scholar's dress and cap seated
in the post of honour, he stopped, not liking to advance
further. But the old man had already caught sight of
him, and asked him how he, a living man, had come
there. Tai threw himself on the ground at his feet, and
<span class="pagenum" title="370"><SPAN name="Page_370"></SPAN></span>
told him all; whereupon the old man cried out, “My
great-grandson!” He then bade him get up; and
offering him a seat, explained that his own name was Tai
Ch'ien, and that he was otherwise known as Lung-fei.
He said, moreover, that in days gone by a worthless
grandson of his named T'ang, had associated himself
with a lot of scoundrels and sunk a well near his grave,
disturbing the peace of his everlasting night; and that
therefore he had flooded the place with salt water and
drowned them. He then inquired as to the general
condition of the family at that time.</p>
<p>Now Tai was a descendant of one of five brothers, from
the eldest of whom T'ang himself was also descended;
and an influential man of the place had bribed T'ang to
open a mine alongside the family grave. His brothers
were afraid to interfere; and by-and-by the water rose
and drowned all the workmen; whereupon actions for
damages were commenced by the relatives of the deceased,
and T'ang and his friend were reduced to
poverty, and T'ang's descendants to absolute destitution.
Tai was a son of one of T'ang's brothers, and having
heard this story from his seniors, now repeated it to the
old man. “How could they be otherwise than unfortunate,”
<span class="pagenum" title="371"><SPAN name="Page_371"></SPAN></span>
cried the latter, “with such an unfilial progenitor?
But since you have come hither, you must on
no account neglect your studies.” The old man then
provided him with food and wine, and spreading a
volume of essays according to the old style before him,
bade him study it most carefully. He also gave him
themes for composition, and corrected his essays as if he
had been his tutor. The candle remained always burning
in the room, never needing to be snuffed and never
decreasing. When he was tired he went to sleep, but
he never knew day from night. The old man occasionally
went out, leaving a boy to attend to his great-grandson's
wants. It seemed that several years passed
away thus, but Tai had no troubles of any kind to annoy
him. He had no other book except the volume of
essays, one hundred in all, which he read through more
than four thousand times. One day the old man said to
him, “Your term of expiation is nearly completed, and
you will be able to return to the world above. My
grave is near the coal-mine, and the grosser breeze plays
upon my bones. Remember to remove them to Tung-yüan.”
Tai promised he would see to this; and then
the old man summoned all the shades together and instructed
them to escort Tai back to the place where they
had found him. The shades now bowed one after the
other, and begged Tai to think of them as well, while
Tai himself was quite at a loss to guess how he was
going to get out.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Tai's family had searched for him everywhere,
and his mother had brought his case to the
<span class="pagenum" title="372"><SPAN name="Page_372"></SPAN></span>
notice of the officials, thereby implicating a large
number of persons, but without getting any trace of the
missing man. Three or four years passed away and
there was a change of magistrate; in consequence of
which the search was relaxed, and Tai's wife, not being
happy where she was, married another husband. Just
then an inhabitant of the place set about repairing the
old well and found Tai's body in the cave at the bottom.
Touching it, he found it was not dead, and at once gave
information to the family. Tai was promptly conveyed
home, and within a day he could tell his own story.</p>
<p>Since he had been down the well, the neighbour who
pushed him in had beaten his own wife to death; and
his father-in-law having brought an action against him,
he had been in confinement for more than a year while
the case was being investigated. When released he
was a mere bag of bones; and then hearing that Tai
had come back to life, he was terribly alarmed and fled
away. The family tried to persuade Tai to take proceedings
against him, but this he would not do, alleging
that what had befallen him was a proper punishment for
his own bad behaviour, and had nothing to do with the
neighbour. Upon this, the said neighbour ventured to
return; and when the water in the well had dried up,
Tai hired men to go down and collect the bones, which
<span class="pagenum" title="373"><SPAN name="Page_373"></SPAN></span>
he put in coffins and buried all together in one place.
He next hunted up Mr. Lung-fei's name in the family
tables of genealogy, and proceeded to sacrifice all kinds
of nice things at his tomb. By-and-by the Literary
Chancellor heard this strange story, and was also very
pleased with Tai's compositions; accordingly, Tai passed
successfully through his examinations, and, having taken
his master's degree, returned home and reburied Mr.
Lung-fei at Tung-yüan, repairing thither regularly every
spring without fail.</p>
<p class="pagenum-h-p"><span class="pagenum" title="374"><SPAN name="Page_374"></SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />