Showing posts with label cricket boy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cricket boy. Show all posts

Saturday, June 30, 2012

THE CRICKET BOY (A Chinese Tale)

The Cricket Boy
(A Chinese Tale)

A long time ago, cricket fighting caught on in the imperial court, with the emperor leading the fad. A local magistrate in Huayin, who wanted to win the favor of the monarch, tried in every way to get him the best fighting crickets. He had a strategy for doing so: He managed to get a cricket that was very good at fighting. He then made his subordinates go to the heads of each village and force them to send in a constant supply of fighting crickets.He would send to the imperial court the crickets that could beat the one he was keeping. Theoretically, everything should have worked smoothly. However, as the magistrate was extremely zealous to please the emperor, he meted out harsh punishment on any village heads who failed to accomplish their tasks. The village heads in turn shifted the burden to the poor villagers, who had to search for the crickets. If they failed to catch them, they had to purchase them from someone else, or they had to pay a levy in cash. The small insects suddenly became a rare commodity. Speculators hoarded good crickets, buying them at a bargain and selling them for an exorbitant price. Many village heads worked hand in hand with the speculators to make profits. In so doing, they bankrupted many a family.Cheng Ming was one such villager. The head of his village delegated part of his duties to him because he found Cheng Ming easy to push around.Cheng Ming did not want to bully his fellow villagers as the village head did him, so he often had to pay cash out of his own pocket when he failed to collect any competent crickets. Soon the little proper ties he had were draining away, and he went into a severe depression. One day, he said to his wife that he wanted to die.“Death is easy, but what will our son do without you?” asked his wife,glancing at their only son, sleeping on the kang. “Why can’t we look for the crickets ourselves instead of buying them? Perhaps we’ll strike some good luck.”Cheng Ming gave up the idea of suicide and went to search for crickets. Armed with a tiny basket of copper wires for catching crickets and a number of small bamboo tubes for holding them, he went about the tedious task. Each day he got up at dawn and did not return until late in the evening.He searched beneath brick debris, dike crevices, and in the weeds and bushes. Days went by, and he caught only a few mediocre crickets that did not measure up to the magistrate’s standards. His worries increased as the dead line drew closer and closer.The day for cricket delivery finally came, but Cheng Ming could not produce any good ones. He was clubbed a hundred times on the buttocks, a form of corporal punishment in the ancient Chinese judicial system. When he was released the next day, he could barely walk. The wound on his buttocks confined him to bed for days and further delayed his search for crickets. He thought of committing suicide again. His wife did not know what to do.

 Then they heard about a hunchbacked fortune teller who was visitingthe village. Cheng Ming’s wife went to see him. The fortune teller gave her a piece of paper with a picture on it. It was a pavilion with a jiashan (rockgarden) behind it. On the bushes by the jiashan sat a fat male cricket. Besideit, however, lurked a large toad, ready to catch the insect with its long,elastic tongue. When the wife got home, she showed the paper to herhusband. Cheng Ming sprang up and jumped to the floor, forgetting the painin his buttocks.“This is the fortune teller’s hint at the location where I can find aperfect cricket to accomplish my task!” he exclaimed.“But we don’t have a pavilion in our village,” his wife re minded him.“Well, take a closer look and think. Doesn’t the temple on the east sideof our village have a rock garden? That must be it.” So saying, Cheng Minglimped to the temple with the support of a make shift crutch. Sure enough,he saw the cricket, and the toad squatting nearby in the rock garden at theback of the temple. He caught the big, black male cricket just before thetoad got hold of it. Back home, he carefully placed the cricket in a jar he hadprepared for it and stowed the jar away in a safe place. “Everything will beover tomorrow,” he gave a sigh of relief and went to tell his best friends inthe village the good news.Cheng Ming’s nine-year-old son was very curious. Seeing his father wasgone, he took the jar and wanted to have a peek at the cricket. He wasremoving the lid carefully, when the big cricket jumped out and hoppedaway. Panicked, the boy tried to catch the fleeing cricket with his hands, butin a flurry, he accidentally squashed the insect when he finally got hold of it.“Good heavens! What’re you going to say to your father when hecomes back?” the mother said in distress and dread. Without a word, the boywent out of the room, tears in his eyes.Cheng Ming became distraught when he saw the dead cricket. Hecouldn’t believe that all his hopes had been dashed in a second. He lookedaround for his son, vowing to teach the little scoundrel a good lesson. Hesearched inside and outside the house, only to locate him in a well at thecorner of the court yard. When he fished him out, the boy was already dead. The father’s fury instantly gave way to sorrow. The grieved parents laid theirson on the kang and lamented over his body the entire night.As Cheng Ming was dressing his son for burial the next morning, he feltthe body still warm. Immediately he put the boy back on the kang, hopingthat he would revive. Gradually the boy came back to life, but to his parents’dismay, he was unconscious, as if he were in a trance. The parents grieved again for the loss of their son. Suddenly theyheard a cricket chirping. The couple traced the sound to a small cricket onthe door step. The appearance of the cricket, however, dashed their hopes,for it was very small. “Well, it’s better than nothing,” Cheng Ming thought.He was about to catch it, when it jumped nimbly on to a wall, cheeping athim. He tip toed to ward it, but it showed no sign of fleeing. Instead, whenCheng Ming came a few steps closer, the little cricket jumped onto his chest.

 Though small, the cricket looked smart and energetic. Cheng Mingplanned to take it to the village head. Uncertain of its capabilities, ChengMing could not go to sleep. He wanted to put the little cricket to the testbefore sending it to the village head. The next morning, Cheng Ming went to a young man from a rich familyin his neighborhood, having heard him boasting about an “invincible” cricketthat he wanted to sell for a high price. When the young man showed hiscricket, Cheng Ming hesitated, because his little cricket seemed no match forthis gigantic insect. To fight this monster would be to condemn his dwarf todeath.“There’s no way my little cricket could survive a confrontation withyour big guy,” Cheng Ming said to the young man, holding his jar tight. Theyoung man goaded and taunted him. At last, Cheng Ming decided to take arisk. “Well, it won’t hurt to give a try. If the little cricket is a good-for-nothing,what’s the use of keeping it anyway?” he thought.When they put the two crickets together in a jar, Cheng Ming’s smallinsect seemed transfixed. No matter how the young man prodded it to fight,it simply would not budge. The young man burst into a guffaw, to the greatembarrassment of Cheng Ming. As the young man spurred the little cricketon, it sud denly seemed to have run out of patience. With great wrath, itcharged the giant opponent head on. The sudden burst of action stunnedboth the young man and Cheng Ming. Before the little creature planted itssmall but sharp teeth into the neck of the big cricket, the terrified young manfished the big insect out of the jar just in time and called off the contest. Thelittle cricket chirped victoriously, and Cheng Ming felt exceedingly happy andproud.Cheng Ming and the young man were commenting on the littlecricket’s extraordinary prowess, when a big rooster rushed over to peck atthe little cricket in the jar. The little cricket hopped out of the jar in time tododge the attack. The rooster then went for it a second time, but suddenlybegan to shake its head violently, screaming in agony. This sudden turn of events baffled Cheng Ming and the onlookers. When they took a closer look,they could not believe their eyes: The little cricket was gnawing on therooster’s bloody comb. The story of a cricket fighting a rooster soon spreadthroughout the village and beyond. The next day, Cheng Ming, along with the village head, sent the cricketto the magistrate and asked for a test fight with his master cricket, but themagistrate re fused on the ground that Cheng Ming’s cricket was too small.“I don’t think you have heard its rooster-fighting story,” Cheng Mingproclaimed with great pride. “You can’t judge it only by its appearance.”“Nonsense, how can a cricket fight a rooster?” asked the magistrate.He ordered a big rooster brought to his office, thinking that Cheng Mingwould quit telling his tall tales when his cricket became the bird’s snack. Thebattle between the little cricket and the rooster ended with the same result: The rooster sped away in great pain, the little cricket chirping triumphantly on its heels.

 The magistrate was first astonished and then pleased, thinking that hefinally had the very insect that could win him the emperor’s favor. He had agolden cage manufactured for the little cricket. Placing it cautiously in thecage, he took it to the emperor. The emperor pitted the little cricket against all his veteran combat antcrickets, and it defeated them one by one. What amused the emperor mostwas that the little creature could even dance to the tune of his court music!Extremely pleased with the magic little creature, the emperor rewarded themagistrate liberally and promoted him to a higher position. The magistrate,now a governor, in turn exempted Cheng Ming from his levies in cash as wellas crickets.A year later, Cheng Ming’s son came out of his stupor. He sat up andrubbed his eyes, to the great surprise and joy of his parents. The first wordshe uttered to his jubilant parents were, “I’m so tired and hungry.” After a hotmeal, he told them, “I dreamed that I had become a cricket, and I fought alot of other crickets. It was such fun! You know what? The greatest fun I hadwas my fight with a couple of roosters!”

Reference: https://www.facebook.com/notes/roni-uy/the-cricket-boy-a-chinese-tale/491553494192544