<h2 class="label">XXVIII</h2>
<h2 class="main">AN ENCOUNTER WITH A HOBGOBLIN</h2></div>
<div class="divBody">
<p class="par first">I got myself into trouble in the year Pyong-sin,
and was locked up; a military man by the name of Choi Won-so, who was
captain of the guard, was involved in it and locked up as well. We
often met in prison and whiled away the hours talking together. On a
certain day the talk turned on goblins, when Captain Choi said,
“When I was young I met with a hobgoblin, which, by the fraction
of a hair, almost cost me my life. A strange case indeed!”</p>
<p class="par">I asked him to tell me of it, when he replied, “I
had originally no home in Seoul, but hearing of a vacant place in Belt
Town, I made application and got it. We went there, my father and the
rest of the family occupying the inner quarters, while I lived in the
front room.</p>
<p class="par">“One night, late, when I was half asleep, the door
suddenly opened, and a woman came in and stood just before the lamp. I
saw her clearly, and knew that she was from the home of a scholar
friend, for I had seen her before and had been greatly attracted
<span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e2307" href="#xd21e2307" name=
"xd21e2307">154</SPAN>]</span>by her beauty, but had never had a chance to
meet her. Now, seeing her enter the room thus, I greeted her gladly,
but she made no reply. I arose to take her by the hand, when she began
walking backwards, so that my hand never reached her. I rushed towards
her, but she hastened her backward pace, so that she eluded me. We
reached the gate, which she opened with a rear kick, and I followed on
after, till she suddenly disappeared. I searched on all sides, but not
a trace was there of her. I thought she had merely hidden herself, and
never dreamed of anything else.</p>
<p class="par">“On the next night she came again and stood before
the lamp just as she had done the night previous. I got up and again
tried to take hold of her, but again she began her peculiar pace
backwards, till she passed out at the gate and disappeared just as she
had done the day before. I was once more surprised and disappointed,
but did not think of her being a hobgoblin.</p>
<p class="par">“A few days later, at night, I had lain down, when
suddenly there was a sound of crackling paper overhead from above the
ceiling. A forbidding, creepy sound it seemed in the midnight. A moment
later a curtain was let down that divided the room into two parts.
Again, later, a large fire of coals descended right in front of me,
while an immense heat filled the place. Where I was seemed <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e2313" href="#xd21e2313" name=
"xd21e2313">155</SPAN>]</span>all on fire, with no way of escape possible.
In terror for my life, I knew not what to do. On the first cock-crow of
morning the noise ceased, the curtain went up, and the fire of coals
was gone. The place was as though swept with a broom, so clean from
every trace of what had happened.</p>
<p class="par">“The following night I was again alone, but had
not yet undressed or lain down, when a great stout man suddenly opened
the door and came in. He had on his head a soldier’s felt hat,
and on his body a blue tunic like one of the underlings of the
<i>yamen</i>. He took hold of me and tried to drag me out. I was then
young and vigorous, and had no intention of yielding to him, so we
entered on a tussle. The moon was bright and the night clear, but I,
unable to hold my own, was pulled out into the court. He lifted me up
and swung me round and round, then went up to the highest terrace and
threw me down, so that I was terribly stunned. He stood in front of me
and kept me a prisoner. There was a garden to the rear of the house,
and a wall round it. I looked, and within the wall were a dozen or so
of people. They were all dressed in military hats and coats, and they
kept shouting out, ‘Don’t hurt him, don’t hurt
him.’</p>
<p class="par">“The man that mishandled me, however, said in
reply, ‘It’s none of your business, none of your
business’; but they still kept up the cry, ‘Don’t
<span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e2322" href="#xd21e2322" name=
"xd21e2322">156</SPAN>]</span>hurt him, don’t hurt him’; and
he, on the other hand, cried, ‘Never you mind; none of your
business.’ They shouted, ‘The man is a gentleman of the
military class; do not hurt him.’</p>
<p class="par">“The fellow merely said in reply, ‘Even
though he is, it’s none of your business’; so he took me by
the two hands and flung me up into the air, till I went half-way and
more to heaven. Then in my fall I went shooting past Kyong-keui
Province, past Choong-chong, and at last fell to the ground in Chulla.
In my flight through space I saw all the county towns of the three
provinces as clear as day. Again in Chulla he tossed me up once more.
Again I went shooting up into the sky and falling northward, till I
found myself at home, lying stupefied below the verandah terrace. Once
more I could hear the voices of the group in the garden shouting,
‘Don’t hurt him—hurt him.’ But the man said,
‘None of your business—your business.’</p>
<p class="par">“He took me up once more and flung me up again,
and away I went speeding off to Chulla, and back I came again, two or
three times in all.</p>
<p class="par">“Then one of the group in the garden came forward,
took my tormentor by the hand and led him away. They all met for a
little to talk and laugh over the matter, and then scattered and were
gone, so that they were not seen again.</p>
<p class="par">“I lay motionless at the foot of the terrace till
<span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e2333" href="#xd21e2333" name=
"xd21e2333">157</SPAN>]</span>the following morning, when my father found
me and had me taken in hand and cared for, so that I came to, and we
all left the haunted house, never to go back.”</p>
<hr class="tb">
<p class="par"></p>
<p class="par"><i>Note.</i>—There are various reasons by which a
place may be denominated a “haunted house.” The fact that
there are hobgoblins in it makes it haunted. If a good or
“superior man” enters such a place the goblins move away,
and no word of being haunted will be heard. Choi saw the goblin and was
greatly injured.</p>
<p class="par">I understand that it is not only a question of men
fearing the goblins, but they also fear men. The fact that there are so
few people that they fear is the saddest case of all. Choi was afraid
of the goblins, that is why they troubled him.</p>
<p class="par signed"><span class="sc">Im Bang.</span> <span class="pagenum">[<SPAN name="xd21e2347" href="#xd21e2347" name=
"xd21e2347">158</SPAN>]</span></p>
</div>
</div>
<div id="ch29" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pagenum">[<SPAN href="#xd21e474">Contents</SPAN>]</span>
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