Hi guys.. Here I will tell you about Visu the Woodsman and the Old Priest, please read bellow!
VISU THE WOODSMAN AND THE OLD PRIEST
Many years ago there lived on the then
barren plain of Suruga a woodsman by the name of Visu. He was a giant in
stature, and lived in a hut with his wife and children.
One day Visu received a visit from an old priest, who said to him: "Honorable woodsman, I am afraid you never pray."
Visu replied: "If you had a wife and a large family to keep, you would never have time to pray."
This remark made the priest angry, and
the old man gave the woodcutter a vivid description of the horror of
being reborn as a toad, or a mouse, or an insect for millions of years.
Such lurid details were not to Visu's liking, and he accordingly
promised the priest that in future he would pray.
"Work and pray," said the priest as he took his departure.
Unfortunately Visu did nothing but pray.
He prayed all day long and refused to do any work, so that his rice
crops withered and his wife and family starved. Visu's wife, who had
hitherto never said a harsh or bitter word to her husband, now became
extremely angry, and, pointing to the poor thin bodies of her children,
she exclaimed: "Rise, Visu, take up your ax and do something more
helpful to us all than the mere mumbling of prayers!"
Visu was so utterly amazed at what his
wife had said that it was some time before he could think of a fitting
reply. When he did so his words came hot and strong to the ears of his
poor, much-wronged wife.
"Woman," said he, "the Gods come first.
You are an impertinent creature to speak to me so, and I will have
nothing more to do with you!" Visu snatched up his ax and, without
looking round to say farewell, he left the hut, strode out of the wood,
and climbed up Fujiyama, where a mist hid him from sight.
When Visu had seated himself upon the
mountain he heard a soft rustling sound, and immediately afterward saw a
fox dart into a thicket. Now Visu deemed it extremely lucky to see a
fox, and, forgetting his prayers, he sprang up, and ran hither and
thither in the hope of again finding this sharp-nosed little creature.
He was about to give up the chase when,
coming to an open space in a wood, he saw two ladies sitting down by a
brook playing go. The woodsman was so completely fascinated that he
could do nothing but sit down and watch them. There was no sound except
the soft click of pieces on the board and the song of the running brook.
The ladies took no notice of Visu, for they seemed to be playing a
strange game that had no end, a game that entirely absorbed their
attention. Visu could not keep his eyes off these fair women. He watched
their long black hair and the little quick hands that shot out now and
again from their big silk sleeves in order to move the pieces.
After he had been sitting there for
three hundred years, though to him it was but a summer's afternoon, he
saw that one of the players had made a false move. "Wrong, most lovely
lady!" he exclaimed excitedly. In a moment these women turned into foxes
and ran away.
When Visu attempted to pursue them he
found to his horror that his limbs were terribly stiff, that his hair
was very long, and that his beard touched the ground. He discovered,
moreover, that the handle of his ax, though made of the hardest wood,
had crumbled away into a little heap of dust.
After many painful efforts Visu was able
to stand on his feet and proceed very slowly toward his little home.
When he reached the spot he was surprised to see no hut, and, perceiving
a very old woman, he said: "Good lady, I am amazed to find that my
little home has disappeared. I went away this afternoon, and now in the
evening it has vanished!"
The old woman, who believed that a
madman was addressing her, inquired his name. When she was told, she
exclaimed: "Bah! You must indeed be mad! Visu lived three hundred years
ago! He went away one day, and he never came back again."
"Three hundred years!" murmured Visu. "It cannot be possible. Where are my dear wife and children?"
"Buried!" hissed the old woman, "and, if
what you say is true, you children's children too. The Gods have
prolonged your miserable life in punishment for having neglected your
wife and little children."
Big tears ran down Visu's withered
cheeks as he said in a husky voice: "I have lost my manhood. I have
prayed when my dear ones starved and needed the labor of my once strong
hands. Old woman, remember my last words: "If you pray, work too!"
We do not know how long the poor but
repentant Visu lived after he returned from his strange adventures. His
white spirit is still said to haunt Fujiyama when the moon shines
brightly.
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