Long ago there was a young couple who lived in a thatched hut in a small village. They were so poor that every day they had to cut two bundles of firewood and carry them to the market on their backs.
One day,
the young couple came back from the mountain carrying the firewood. They put
one bundle in the courtyard and planned to sell it at the market the next day
to buy rice. The other bundle they kept in the kitchen for their own use. When
they woke up the following morning, the bundle in the courtyard had
mysteriously disappeared. There was nothing to do but to sell the bundle which
they had kept for themselves.
That same
day, they cut another two bundles of firewood as usual. They put one bundle in
the courtyard for the market and kept the other bundle for their own use. But
the following morning, the bundle in the courtyard had vanished again. The same
thing happened on the third and fourth day as well, and the husband began to
think there was something strange going on.
On the fifth
day, he made a hollow in the bundle of firewood in the courtyard and hid
himself inside it. From the outside it looked just the same as before.
At midnight a huge rope descended from the sky, attached itself to the bundle
and lifted it up into the sky, with the woodcutter still inside it.
On his arrival in heaven, he saw a
kind looking, white-haired old man coming in his direction. The old man untied
the bundle and when he found the man inside it, he
asked, “Other people only cut one bundle of firewood a day. Why do you cut
two?”
The
woodcutter made a bow and replied, “We are very
poor. That’s why my wife and I cut two bundles of firewood a day. One bundle is
for our own use and the other we carry to the market. With it we can buy rice
to make porridge.”
The old man
chuckled and said to the woodcutter in a warmhearted tone of voice, “I’ve known
for a long time that you
are a decent couple and lead a frugal and hardworking life. I shall give you a piece of treasure. Take it back with you
and it will provide for you.”
As soon as he had finished
speaking, there came seven fairies who led the young man into a magnificent
palace. Its golden eaves and shinning roof tiles shone so brightly that the
moment he entered; he could no longer open his eyes. Inside the palace there
were many kinds of precious objects on display: moneybags of all shapes and
sizes hung in one room. The fairies asked him, “Which
one do you like best? Choose whichever you please, and take it home.”
The
woodcutter was beside himself with joy, “I’d like that moneybag, the one full
of precious things. Give me that round, bulging one.” He chose the biggest one
and took it down.
Just at this moment, the
white-haired old man came in and, with a stern expression on his face, said to
the young man, “You cannot take that one. I’ll give you an empty one. Every day
you can take one tael of silver out of it, and no more.” The woodcutter
reluctantly agreed. He took the empty moneybag and, clinging onto the huge
rope, he was lowered to the ground.
Once home, he
gave the moneybag to his wife and told her the whole story. She was most
excited. In the daytime they went as usual to cut firewood. But from
then on, whenever they returned home after dark, they would close the door and
open the moneybag. Instantly, a lump of silver would roll jingling out. Every
day one tael of silver and no more came rolling out of the bag. The wife saved
them up one by one.
Time went slowly by. One day the
husband was itching to spend all the money they had saved and he said, “Since we
have so much money in hand, why don’t we build a brick house?”
The wife could not dissuade her husband and reluctantly went
along with his idea.
The husband spent the money on
bricks, tiles and timber and on hiring carpenters and masons. From that time on,
neither of them went into the mountain to cut firewood any more. The day came
when their pile of silver was almost exhausted, but the new house was still
unfinished. It had long been in the back of the husband’s mind to ask the
moneybag to produce more silver. So without his wife’s knowledge, he opened the
bag for a second time that day. Instantly, another lump of snow-white silver
rolled jingling out of the bag onto the ground. He opened it a third time and
received a third lump.
He thought to himself, “If I go on
like this, I can get the house finished in no time!” He quite forgot the old
man’s warning. But when he opened the bag for the fourth time, it was
absolutely empty. This time not a scrap of silver came out of it. It was just
an old cloth bag. When he turned to look at his unfinished brick house, that
was gone as well. There before him was his old thatched hut.
The woodcutter felt very sad. His
wife came over and consoled him, “We can’t depend on the magic moneybag from
heaven. Let’s go back to the mountain to cut firewood as we did before. That’s
a more dependable way of earning a living.”
From that day on, the young couple
once again went up to the mountain to cut firewood and lived their old,
hardworking life.
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