Tales of Old Japan eBook

Algernon Freeman-Mitford, 1st Baron Redesdale
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 481 pages of information about Tales of Old Japan.

Tales of Old Japan eBook

Algernon Freeman-Mitford, 1st Baron Redesdale
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 481 pages of information about Tales of Old Japan.

The Suit of Feathers is the title of a very pretty conceit which followed.  A fisherman enters, and in a long recitative describes the scenery at the sea-shore of Miwo, in the province of Suruga, at the foot of Fuji-Yama, the Peerless Mountain.  The waves are still, and there is a great calm; the fishermen are all out plying their trade.  The speaker’s name is Hakuriyo, a fisherman living in the pine-grove of Miwo.  The rains are now over, and the sky is serene; the sun rises bright and red over the pine-trees and rippling sea; while last night’s moon is yet seen faintly in the heaven.  Even he, humble fisher though he be, is softened by the beauty of the nature which surrounds him.  A breeze springs up, the weather will change; clouds and waves will succeed sunshine and calm; the fishermen must get them home again.  No; it is but the gentle breath of spring, after all; it scarcely stirs the stout fir-trees, and the waves are hardly heard to break upon the shore.  The men may go forth in safety.  The fisherman then relates how, while he was wondering at the view, flowers began to rain from the sky, and sweet music filled the air, which was perfumed by a mystic fragrance.  Looking up, he saw hanging on a pine-tree a fairy’s suit of feathers, which he took home, and showed to a friend, intending to keep it as a relic in his house.  A heavenly fairy makes her appearance, and claims the suit of feathers; but the fisherman holds to his treasure trove.  She urges the impiety of his act—­a mortal has no right to take that which belongs to the fairies.  He declares that he will hand down the feather suit to posterity as one of the treasures of the country.  The fairy bewails her lot; without her wings how can she return to heaven?  She recalls the familiar joys of heaven, now closed to her; she sees the wild geese and the gulls flying to the skies, and longs for their power of flight; the tide has its ebb and its flow, and the sea-breezes blow whither they list:  for her alone there is no power of motion, she must remain on earth.  At last, touched by her plaint, the fisherman consents to return the feather suit, on condition that the fairy shall dance and play heavenly music for him.  She consents, but must first obtain the feather suit, without which she cannot dance.  The fisherman refuses to give it up, lest she should fly away to heaven without redeeming her pledge.  The fairy reproaches him for his want of faith:  how should a heavenly being be capable of falsehood?  He is ashamed, and gives her the feather suit, which she dons, and begins to dance, singing of the delights of heaven, where she is one of the fifteen attendants who minister to the moon.  The fisherman is so transported with joy, that he fancies himself in heaven, and wishes to detain the fairy to dwell with him for ever.  A song follows in praise of the scenery and of the Peerless Mountain capped with the snows of spring.  When her dance is concluded, the fairy, wafted away by the sea-breeze, floats past the pine-grove to Ukishima and Mount Ashidaka, over Mount Fuji, till she is seen dimly like a cloud in the distant sky, and vanishes into thin air.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Tales of Old Japan from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.