<h2 class="label">XXII</h2>
<h2 class="main">THE MAN WHO LOST HIS LEGS</h2></div>
<div class="divBody">
<p class="par first">There was a merchant in Chong-ju who used to go to
Quelpart to buy seaweed. One time when he drew up on the shore he saw a
man shuffling along on the ground toward the boat. He crept nearer, and
at last took hold of the side with both his hands and jumped in.</p>
<p class="par">“When I looked at him,” said the merchant,
“I found he was an old man without any legs. Astonished, I asked,
saying, ‘How is it, old man, that you have lost your
legs?’</p>
<p class="par">“He said in reply, ‘I lost my legs on a trip
once when I was shipwrecked, and a great fish bit them
off.’”</p>
<p class="par">“However did that happen?” inquired the
merchant. And the old man said, “We were caught in a gale and
driven till we touched on some island or other. Before us on the shore
stood a high castle with a great gateway. The twenty or so of us who
were together in the storm-tossed boat were all exhausted from cold and
hunger, and lying <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e1833" href="#xd21e1833" name="xd21e1833">113</SPAN>]</span>exposed. We landed and
managed to go together to the house. There was in it one man only,
whose height was terrible to behold, and whose chest was many spans
round. His face was black and his eyes large and rolling. His voice was
like the braying of a monster donkey. Our people made motions showing
that they wanted something to eat. The man made no reply, but securely
fastened the front gate. After this he brought an armful of wood, put
it in the middle of the courtyard, and there made a fire. When the fire
blazed up he rushed after us and caught a young lad, one of our
company, cooked him before our eyes, pulled him to pieces and ate him.
We were all reduced to a state of horror, not knowing what to do. We
gazed at each other in dismay and stupefaction.</p>
<p class="par">“When he had eaten his fill, he went up into a
verandah and opened a jar, from which he drank some kind of spirit.
After drinking it he uttered the most gruesome and awful noises; his
face grew very red and he lay down and slept. His snorings were like
the roarings of the thunder. We planned then to make our escape, and so
tried to open the large gate, but one leaf was about twenty-four feet
across, and so thick and heavy that with all our strength we could not
move it. The walls, too, were a hundred and fifty feet high, and so we
could do nothing with them. We were like fish in a
pot—<span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e1837" href="#xd21e1837"
name="xd21e1837">114</SPAN>]</span>beyond all possible way of escape. We
held each other’s hands, and cried.</p>
<p class="par">“Among us, one man thought of this plan: We had a
knife and he took it, and while the monster was drunk and asleep,
decided to stab his eyes out, and cut his throat. We said in reply,
‘We are all doomed to death, anyway; let’s try,’ and
we made our way up on to the verandah and stabbed his eyes. He gave an
awful roar, and struck out on all sides to catch us. We rushed here and
there, making our escape out of the court back into the rear garden.
There were in this enclosure pigs and sheep, about sixty of them in
all. There we rushed, in among the pigs and sheep. He floundered about,
waving his two arms after us, but not one of us did he get hold of; we
were all mixed up—sheep, pigs and people. When he did catch
anything it was a sheep; and when it was not a sheep it was a pig. So
he opened the front gate to send all the animals out.</p>
<p class="par">“We then each of us took a pig or sheep on the
back and made straight for the gate. The monster felt each, and finding
it a pig or a sheep let it go. Thus we all got out and rushed for the
boat. A little later he came and sat on the bank and roared his
threatenings at us. A lot of other giants came at his call. They took
steps of thirty feet or so, came racing after us, caught the boat, and
made it <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e1843" href="#xd21e1843"
name="xd21e1843">115</SPAN>]</span>fast; but we took axes and struck at
the hands that held it, and so got free at last and out to the open
sea.</p>
<p class="par">“Again a great wind arose, and we ran on to the
rocks and were all destroyed. Every one was engulfed in the sea and
drowned; I alone got hold of a piece of boat-timber and lived. Then
there was a horrible fish from the sea that came swimming after me and
bit off my legs. At last I drifted back home and here I am.</p>
<p class="par">“When I think of it still, my teeth are cold and
my bones shiver. My Eight Lucky Stars are very bad, that’s why it
happened to me.”</p>
<p class="par signed"><span class="sc">Anon.</span> <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e1854" href="#xd21e1854" name=
"xd21e1854">116</SPAN>]</span></p>
</div>
</div>
<div id="ch23" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pagenum">[<SPAN href="#xd21e419">Contents</SPAN>]</span>
<div class="divHead">
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