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Hanasaka Jisan (An old man made blossoms) - A Japanese Folk Legend

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Last weekend I went to visit my sister who lives in Wisconsin. It had been nearly seven years since I saw her, so I was really happy to go. Since I think she would like this, this entry is dedicated to her. ^v^



Once upon a time in a remote mountain village in Japan there lived an honest old man and his wife. The old man was out plowing his field one day when a little white puppy came fleeing toward him, crying. The puppy had been mistreated by the greedy old man who lived in the next field over. "Oh, you poor thing." exclaimed the old man, and taking him in, gave the puppy the name "Shiro." ("Shiro" in Japanese means white)

The old man and his wife loved Shiro very much. Shiro, in turn, became devoted to the old couple, and helped the old man with his work in the field every day. Shiro ate and ate, and quickly grew into a big dog.

One day, Shiro led the old man up a nearby mountain. When they reached the top, Shiro barked, "Arf Arf - Dig here! Arf Arf - Dig here!" As the old man began to dig, to his amazement, sparkling gold coins started pouring up from the ground.

"Let me borrow Shiro!" The greedy old man heard about this and, grabbing Shiro, forced him to take he and his wife to the mountain. "Where's the gold?" the old man demanded. Frightened, Shiro began to whimper. "Ah, so it's here," said the old man, and he began to dig. But instead of gold coins, garbage began pouring up from the ground. "How dare you!" exclaimed the old man. Furious, they killed Shiro.

When the honest old couple found out about this, they were overcome with grief. They decided to dig a grave for Shiro. Upon burying Shiro, a sapling sprouted from the ground above his grave. By the next day, it had grown into a towering tree.

"Shiro liked steamed rice cakes," recalled the old man. "Let's make some to take to his grave." He chopped down the tree that had sprung from Shiro's grave and made a mortar. Then he and his wife began to prepare the rice cakes. As the old man pounded the rice into the mortar, it began to turn into gold coins.

Upon seeing this, the greedy old couple rushed over. "Give us that mortar." Stealing the mortar, they returned to their house and began to make rice cakes. When they pounded rice, however, it turned into black mud right before their eyes. "What on earth?" cried the old man. Furious, he took an axe and chopped the mortar to pieces. Then he tossed the pieces of wood into the stove and burned them. The honest old man was disheartened. He gathered up the ashes from the mortar, put them in a box, and carried the box carefully back to his house.

"Let's sprinkle these ashes over the field and grow the radish that Shiro loved so much." When the old man sprinkled the ashes, a wind swirled up and blew the ashes into a dead tree. Amazingly, the dead tree began to bloom beautiful cherry blossoms. He then went and happily sprinkled ashes onto one dead tree after another, each which thereafter bloomed brilliant cherry flowers. News of the old man's miracle reached the town and before long, even the ears of the king, who promptly sent for the old man.

The old man was brought to the king, carrying his box of ashes. "Now I'll make the flowers bloom." He sprinkled the ashes onto the nearby trees, and immediately, beautiful white cherry flowers appeared.

"Splendid!" exclaimed the king, who was very pleased. "Well done. You are the greatest flower bloomer in all of Japan. You will be rewarded."

At that moment, the greedy old man came running, carrying the leftover ashes which he had gathered from the stove. "Wait! I'm the greatest flower bloomer in Japan." With that, he began to sprinkle his ashes. Instead of landing on the flowers, however, the ash flew into the eyes and nose of the king, choking him. "You impudent!" the king stormed, and promptly threw the greedy old man into prison.



-- http://web-jpn.org/kidsweb/folk/hanasaka/index.html

Read other Japanese Folk Tales and much more at Kids Web Japan

What Flavor Chips Are You?Finals

Comments

Cois 13. November 2008, 13:00

Awww Shiro awww

SpicyFlier 18. November 2008, 03:55

What a great story! I did a course years ago on myths and legends from other countries - and how they were similar. This one could be something like, "A good heart brings a good reward". (Seven years is a long time to see family; you've done a bit of that this year, it seems)

Thanks for sharing Tori!

shoppingpenguin 19. November 2008, 05:04

Yeah. I wish I wasn't so busy. Maybe my priorities are out of order? By the way I am pretty sure I failed an exam today... =(

SqueakeyCat 19. November 2008, 07:08

a very beautiful story, tori

SpicyFlier 19. November 2008, 11:43

Hmmm...well, I don't know about priorities. Perhaps geography is a main issue?

The last 3 times this semester I was pretty sure I failed an exam I was 10-15% over the class average. I'm learning to wait until I get the actual exam back...(gotta luv part marks)

greatMasri 24. December 2008, 04:46

Wow you r a real telling story. Good 4 you, i ll visit your page more. :wink:

qlue 24. December 2008, 05:56

Beautifull story. :up:.

princessofdeath 24. December 2008, 10:11

Awwww... poor doggie.. I almost cried because Shiro looked exactly like my beloved pet god... he is also white, big and fluffy like a polar bear. I love Japanese folktales!

mallorygerber 23. February 2009, 08:37

Thanks for sharing this story.
I wish the dog didn't have to die though.
hope you grades are getting better. ;-)

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