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TOKGABI'S
MENAGERIE (Cats and Dogs) THERE are
many dogs, but few cats, in Korea. Nobody loves poor pussy there. They
are not
made pets and are rarely seen in the houses of the people. Even bull
calves are
more caressed by the children than are cats and the puppy dog takes the
place
of Tabby or Grimalkin. Korean
cats are not bob-tailed, like their cousins in Japan; nor is pussy in
the Land
of Topknots ever used, as the Chinese kitten is, to tell the time of
day by the
width of the slits in its green eyes. Alas! the
cats in Korea are too wild to enjoy the society of human beings, or
human
beings theirs! The presence of dogs is especially hateful to them.
Mother cats
tell their kittens wonderful stories of the cruelty of dogs and why
cats and
dogs do not agree. The native
roof-scramblers can howl and caterwaul, arch their backs, blow up their
tails,
spit and scratch, or purr pleasantly, lick their fur, and wash their
faces with
their paws like cats in other countries. They are highly accomplished
as mouse
catchers and bird-eaters. Yet they have a hard time of it, for there
are too
many dogs to make a kitty's life either easy or agreeable. The Korean
cat hates
to get its feet wet, yet it is often obliged to wade in the water to
get rid of
the dogs that chase it. As for the furry, purry kittens, one wonders
how they
ever escape the fierce dogs and grow up at all. Yet it all
came about because a certain cat-ancestor laughed when it shouldn't
have done
so. Although it was a lot of school-children that made Kitty laugh, the
dog
never forgave the cat for its frivolity. And this is how it happened. Long, long
ago, one of the mountain fairies had come down into the land from the
high
peaks, and being kindly treated by an old man named Tip Pul, who kept a
wine
shop, called Tokgabi to himself and bade him reward the old fellow with
a
precious stone. So, one
night, Tokgabi dropped the gem into Tip Pul's long-necked wine bottle.
Strangely enough, after this, the wine never ceased. The bottle was
always
full. Every day Tip Pul sold plenty to his neighbors and it was good
and cheap,
so that the shopkeeper was very popular. Yet, without any refilling,
the flask
was always ready to overflow. So Tip Pul had no fear of poverty in
extreme old
age. Having neither wife nor children, his only companions were a dog
named Su
Nap, or Snap, for short, and a cat named Mee Yow. All three lived
happily
together in these times of long ago. But one
day the bottle was found to be empty, and when Tip Pul shook it,
nothing
rattled inside. Somehow the magic stone had disappeared. Poverty now
seemed
certain. The old man was nearly paralyzed with grief and his neighbors
all came
in to sympathize with him. They knew well that they could buy no wine
anywhere
else so good and so cheap as they had long enjoyed at Tip Pul's shop by
the
river. Yet this
loss of the wonderful stone
was the
very making of Tip Pul's pets. As for the cat, she became the most
industrious
kitty ever known. She at once began to ransack every rat's quarters
known, not
only in her master's home, but in every house in the village. The
racket which
that cat kept up at night, among the rafters and beams under the roof,
nearly
drove some people crazy. They declared that Tokgabi had got drunk by
tasting
Tip Pul's drams. Yet it was Mee Yow all the time. The cat knocked over
tobacco
boxes, scratched among hat covers hung on the wall, tipped up the
hanging
shelves and upset the crockery in the closet over the kitchen stove. In
a word,
this four-footed creature played every kind of mischief that people
usually
ascribe to Tokgabi, the sooty imp. Yet, when
any one climbed up to the attic, looked among the rafters, and peered
into the
darkness, all he could see was a pair of green eyes that shone like the
moon.
Poking the uncanny thing with fishing poles, or throwing shoes or
sticks at it,
only caused spitting or snarling. So they knew it was a cat, and not
Tokgabi,
and betook themselves to bed again. Laying their topknots on their
wooden
pillows and their bodies on their oiled-paper carpet, they soon fell
asleep
again. The Koreans do not swear, but the way some good folks hurled bad
words
and heaped curses and vile names on all the female ancestors of that
cat, clear
back to the time of Kija, was dreadful to think of. It exceeded even
the
language of the street quarrels of to-day. Indeed, some of their
remarks are
still preserved in tradition and proverbs. Nevertheless, with all his
pains
taken, Mee Yow could not find the magic wine-stone. As for Tip Pul, he
got
poorer and poorer. The dog,
being without the cat's sharp claws, could not climb like Puss among
the
rafters and the roofs, but being able to run fast and having a nose
that could
smell a tiger a mile off, he made excursions all over the country, even
crossing the ice of the frozen river. Although he fought many another
dog,
chased many a rat into its hole, and worried about a hundred cats, even
jumping
into wood-sheds and running in and out among the cows and horses, he
found
nothing. Once, while in a stall where the pony, tied up with a
belly-band by
ropes to the ceiling, was enjoying its supper of bean soup, the poor
doggy was
nearly kicked to death. The vicious brute, thinking that Snap was
trying to
steal some beans from its feed box, gave the dog a blow with its hoofs
that
made Snap go on three legs for a week afterward. The long
winter passed away and the ice melted, but the river water was still
cold. One
day Pussy, while chasing a rat among the rafters of a house of a
Yang-ban or
gentleman, brushed its whiskers against a greenish soapstone box, such
as the
king often sends as a present to those whom he likes. Recognizing the
smell of something
inside as that of his master's long-lost gem, he tried hard by tooth
and claw
to open it. All
Pussy's scratching, biting and clawing, however, were in vain. Nor
could the
dog help in the least. So a
bargain was struck with the rats to gnaw open the box and get the magic
stone.
Dog and cat together immediately went to the principal rat hole of the
village.
There they kept up such barking, howling and caterwauling, that the
King of the
Rats, from a safe distance within, called out to know what was wanted. Then and
there the trouble was fully explained. Both the big creatures, Su Nap
and Mee
Yow, promised to let all rats and mice entirely alone for six months,
if one of
them would agree to gnaw open the box and produce the stone. The dog
lifted his
paw, barked and wagged his tail, and the cat washed her face over and
over
again with her paw, patted gently a stone that looked like a rat as a
sign of
peace, and blinked in token of truth-telling. Not even a rat's baby or
a
mouse's grandmother was to be touched until after rice harvest in the
autumn,
six months distant from the date of the contract. Delighted
at the prospect of peace and quiet for half a year, and especially
while the
grain should be ripening, both rats and mice worked together, until out
of a
hole gnawed in the box, polished and hard on their teeth as it was,
they got
the magic stone. Carrying it in their paws, they dropped it where their
former
enemies, now so peaceful, could get it. At once the dog took the gem in
his
mouth and ran to the river, Mee Yow following after. "Now,
Kit," said Snap, "get on my back and hold tight to my neck-hair with
your claws, while I swim across. As I must breathe hard, put the gem in
your
mouth. Mind that you don't open your jaws, or yawn, or laugh, till we
get
across. Do you hear?" Mee Yow
wagged her tail and took the wine-stone firmly in her mouth in token of
fierce
determination to deliver that precious gem safely to her master. All
the time
Mee Yow intended to jump ashore and run to her master, while the dog
would be
shaking off the water from his hair, and thus get the credit for first
finding
where the stone had been. It was a
long, hard swim and the dog's strength was nearly used up when only
two-thirds
across the river, but the cat was happy, for she had only to hold on
and keep
her feet dry. All went well until when near the shore. Now it
happened just then that a party of children, out of school and ready
for fun,
caught sight of the odd pair. They had never seen anything so funny in
all
their lives, and at once they laughed uproariously. Snap was too
serious to pay
any attention to their glee, but Mee Yow, already tickled with vanity,
became
positively frivolous. She too joined with the children and laughed so
hard that
Snap's body was badly shaken, so that he nearly got his nose under
water and
drowned them both. This made the light-headed and conceited cat laugh
all the
more. Finally bursting in a guffaw, Mee Yow dropped the gem out of her
mouth,
so that it was hopelessly lost in the river and fell to the bottom. That was
too much for the dog, to have his labor thus wasted. Thinking only of
his
master the faithful and serious Snap dived to the bottom of the river,
tumbling
Mee Yow off, though much scratching and clawing took place before Puss
let go
and swam ashore. Alas! the dog could not find
the precious gem, and when once on
land he first shook himself to dry his hair and then rushed at the cat
to give
her a good shaking. But Mee Yow climbed up a tree, and though nearly
frozen to
death after her icy bath, kept up growling as long as the dog barked. After
that, in Korea, the cats and dogs ceased to be friends. Indeed, they
never
spoke to each other. Wild, unloved and unpetted, the cat belongs to the
bad
animals in Tokgabi's museum, while the puppy dog, with a good
reputation, is
the pet of the family and his big father and uncles are the faithful
friends of
man. A party of
children caught sight of the odd pair. |