Chinese Literature eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 342 pages of information about Chinese Literature.

Chinese Literature eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 342 pages of information about Chinese Literature.

In this way the tempest continued day and night, till on the thirteenth day the ship was carried to the side of an island, where, on the ebbing of the tide, the place of the leak was discovered, and it was stopped, on which the voyage was resumed.  On the sea hereabouts there are many pirates, to meet with whom is speedy death.  The great ocean spreads out, a boundless expanse.  There is no knowing east or west; only by observing the sun, moon, and stars was it possible to go forward.  If the weather were dark and rainy, the ship went as she was carried by the wind, without any definite course.  In the darkness of the night, only the great waves were to be seen, breaking on one another, and emitting a brightness like that of fire, with huge turtles and other monsters of the deep all about.  The merchants were full of terror, not knowing where they were going.  The sea was deep and bottomless, and there was no place where they could drop anchor and stop.  But when the sky became clear, they could tell east and west, and the ship again went forward in the right direction.  If she had come on any hidden rock, there would have been no way of escape.

After proceeding in this way for rather more than ninety days, they arrived at a country called Java-dvipa, where various forms of error and Brahmanism are flourishing, while Buddhism in it is not worth speaking of.  After staying there for five months, Fa-hien again embarked in another large merchantman, which also had on board more than two hundred men.  They carried provisions for fifty days, and commenced the voyage on the sixteenth day of the fourth month.

Fa-hien kept his retreat on board the ship.  They took a course to the northeast, intending to fetch Kwang-chow.  After more than a month, when the night-drum had sounded the second watch, they encountered a black wind and tempestuous rain, which threw the merchants and passengers into consternation.  Fa-hien again, with all his heart, directed his thoughts to Kwan-she-yin and the monkish communities of the land of Han; and, through their dread and mysterious protection, was preserved to daybreak.  After daybreak, the Brahmans deliberated together and said, “It is having this Sramana on board which has occasioned our misfortune and brought us this great and bitter suffering.  Let us land the bhikshu and place him on some island-shore.  We must not for the sake of one man allow ourselves to be exposed to such imminent peril.”  A patron of Fa-hien, however, said to them, “If you land the bhikshu, you must at the same time land me; and if you do not, then you must kill me.  If you land this Sramana, when I get to the land of Han, I will go to the king, and inform against you.  The king also reveres and believes the Law of Buddha, and honors the bhikshus.”  The merchants hereupon were perplexed, and did not dare immediately to land Fa-hien.

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Project Gutenberg
Chinese Literature from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.