Myths and Legends of China eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 432 pages of information about Myths and Legends of China.

Myths and Legends of China eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 432 pages of information about Myths and Legends of China.

“Your Majesty must send your ministers, who must observe the Buddhist rules of abstinence, to Hsiang Shan, where they will be given what is required.”

“Where is Hsiang Shan, and how far from here?”

“About three thousand or more li, but I myself will indicate the route to be followed; in a very short time they will return.”

The King, who was suffering terribly, was more contented when he heard that the journey could be rapidly accomplished.  He called his two ministers, Chao Chen and Liu Ch’in, and instructed them to lose no time in starting for Hsiang Shan and to observe scrupulously the Buddhist rules of abstinence.  He ordered the Minister of Ceremonies to detain the priest in the palace until their return.

A Conspiracy that Failed

The two sons-in-law of the King, Ho Feng and Chao K’uei, who had already made secret preparations to succeed to the throne as soon as the King should breathe his last, learned with no little surprise that the priest had hopes of curing the King’s illness, and that he was waiting in the palace until the saving remedy was brought to him.  Fearing that they might be disappointed in their ambition, and that after his recovery the King, faithful to his promise, would give the crown to the priest, they entered into a conspiracy with an unscrupulous courtier named Ho Li.  They were obliged to act quickly, because the ministers were travelling by forced marches, and would soon be back.  That same night Ho Li was to give to the King a poisoned drink, composed, he would say, by the priest with the object of assuaging the King’s pain until the return of his two ministers.  Shortly after, an assassin, Su Ta, was to murder the priest.  Thus at one stroke both the King and the priest would meet their death, and the kingdom would pass to the King’s two sons-in-law.

Miao Shan had returned to Hsiang Shan, leaving in the palace the bodily form of the priest.  She saw the two traitors Ho Feng and Chao K’uei preparing the poison, and was aware of their wicked intentions.  Calling the spirit Yu I, who was on duty that day, she told him to fly to the palace and change into a harmless soup the poison about to be administered to the King and to bind the assassin hand and foot.

At midnight Ho Li, carrying in his hand the poisoned drink, knocked at the door of the royal apartment, and said to the Queen that the priest had prepared a soothing potion while awaiting the return of the ministers.  “I come,” he said, “to offer it to his Majesty.”  The Queen took the bowl in her hands and was about to give it to the King, when Yu I arrived unannounced.  Quick as thought he snatched the bowl from the Queen and poured the contents on the ground; at the same moment he knocked over those present in the room, so that they all rolled on the floor.

At the time this was happening the assassin Su Ta entered the priest’s room, and struck him with his sword.  Instantly the assassin, without knowing how, found himself enwrapped in the priest’s robe and thrown to the ground.  He struggled and tried to free himself, but found that his hands had been rendered useless by some mysterious power, and that flight was impossible.  The spirit Yu I, having fulfilled the mission entrusted to him, now returned to Hsiang Shan and reported to Miao Shan.

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Myths and Legends of China from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.