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Chong Mong…ju。  In Song…do I became a fuel…carrier; and the Lady Om

and I shared a hut that was vastly more comfortable than the open

road in bitter winter weather。  But Chong Mong…ju found me out; and

I was beaten and planked and put out upon the road。  That was a

terrible winter; the winter poor 〃What…Now〃 Vandervoot froze to

death on the streets of Keijo。



In Pyeng…yang I became a water…carrier; for know that that old city;

whose walls were ancient even in the time of David; was considered

by the people to be a canoe; and that; therefore; to sink a well

inside the walls would be to scupper the city。  So all day long

thousands of coolies; water…jars yoked to their shoulders; tramp out

the river gate and back。  I became one of these; until Chong Mong…ju

sought me out; and I was beaten and planked and set upon the

highway。



Ever it was the same。  In far Wiju I became a dog…butcher; killing

the brutes publicly before my open stall; cutting and hanging the

caresses for sale; tanning the hides under the filth of the feet of

the passers…by by spreading the hides; raw…side up; in the muck of

the street。  But Chong Mong…ju found me out。  I was a dyer's helper

in Pyonhan; a gold…miner in the placers of Kang…wun; a rope…maker

and twine…twister in Chiksan。  I plaited straw hats in Padok;

gathered grass in Whang…hai; and in Masenpo sold myself to a rice

farmer to toil bent double in the flooded paddies for less than a

coolie's pay。  But there was never a time or place that the long arm

of Chong Mong…ju did not reach out and punish and thrust me upon the

beggar's way。



The Lady Om and I searched two seasons and found a single root of

the wild mountain ginseng; which is esteemed so rare and precious a

thing by the doctors that the Lady Om and I could have lived a year

in comfort from the sale of our one root。  But in the selling of it

I was apprehended; the root confiscated; and I was better beaten and

longer planked than ordinarily。



Everywhere the wandering members of the great Peddlers' Guild

carried word of me; of my comings and goings and doings; to Chong

Mong…ju at Keijo。  Only twice; in all the days after my downfall;

did I meet Chong Mong…ju face to face。  The first time was a wild

winter night of storm in the high mountains of Kang…wun。  A few

hoarded coppers had bought for the Lady Om and me sleeping space in

the dirtiest and coldest corner of the one large room of the inn。

We were just about to begin on our meagre supper of horse…beans and

wild garlic cooked into a stew with a scrap of bullock that must

have died of old age; when there was a tinkling of bronze pony bells

and the stamp of hoofs without。  The doors opened; and entered Chong

Mong…ju; the personification of well…being; prosperity and power;

shaking the snow from his priceless Mongolian furs。  Place was made

for him and his dozen retainers; and there was room for all without

crowding; when his eyes chanced to light on the Lady Om and me。



〃The vermin there in the cornerclear it out;〃 he commanded。



And his horse…boys lashed us with their whips and drove us out into

the storm。  But there was to be another meeting; after long years;

as you shall see。



There was no escape。  Never was I permitted to cross the northern

frontier。  Never was I permitted to put foot to a sampan on the sea。

The Peddlers' Guild carried these commands of Chong Mong…ju to every

village and every soul in all Cho…Sen。  I was a marked man。



Lord; Lord; Cho…Sen; I know your every highway and mountain path;

all your walled cities and the least of your villages。  For two…

score years I wandered and starved over you; and the Lady Om ever

wandered and starved with me。  What we in extremity have eaten!

Leavings of dog's flesh; putrid and unsaleable; flung to us by the

mocking butchers; MINARI; a water…cress gathered from stagnant pools

of slime; spoiled KIMCHI that would revolt the stomachs of peasants

and that could be smelled a mile。  AyI have stolen bones from

curs; gleaned the public road for stray grains of rice; robbed

ponies of their steaming bean…soup on frosty nights。



It is not strange that I did not die。  I knew and was upheld by two

things:  the first; the Lady Om by my side; the second; the certain

faith that the time would come when my thumbs and fingers would

fast…lock in the gullet of Chong Mong…ju。



Turned always away at the city gates of Keijo; where I sought Chong

Mong…ju; we wandered on; through seasons and decades of seasons;

across Cho…Sen; whose every inch of road was an old story to our

sandals。  Our history and identity were wide…scattered as the land

was wide。  No person breathed who did not know us and our

punishment。  There were coolies and peddlers who shouted insults at

the Lady Om and who felt the wrath of my clutch in their topknots;

the wrath of my knuckles in their faces。  There were old women in

far mountain villages who looked on the beggar woman by my side; the

lost Lady Om; and sighed and shook their heads while their eyes

dimmed with tears。  And there were young women whose faces warmed

with compassion as they gazed on the bulk of my shoulders; the blue

of my eyes; and my long yellow hairI who had once been a prince of

Koryu and the ruler of provinces。  And there were rabbles of

children that tagged at our heels; jeering and screeching; pelting

us with filth of speech and of the common road。



Beyond the Yalu; forty miles wide; was the strip of waste that

constituted the northern frontier and that ran from sea to sea。  It

was not really waste land; but land that had been deliberately made

waste in carrying out Cho…Sen's policy of isolation。  On this forty…

mile strip all farms; villages and cities had been destroyed。  It

was no man's land; infested with wild animals and traversed by

companies of mounted Tiger Hunters whose business was to kill any

human being they found。  That way there was no escape for us; nor

was there any escape for us by sea。



As the years passed my seven fellow…cunies came more to frequent

Fusan。  It was on the south…east coast where the climate was milder。

But more than climate; it lay nearest of all Cho…Sen to Japan。

Across the narrow straits; just farther than the eye can see; was

the one hope of escape Japan; where doubtless occasional ships of

Europe came。  Strong upon me is the vision of those seven ageing men

on the cliffs of Fusan yearning with all their souls across the sea

they would never sail again。



At times junks of Japan were sighted; but never lifted a familiar

topsail of old Europe above the sea…rim。  Years came and went; and

the seven cunies and myself and the Lady Om; passing through middle

life into old age; more and more directed our footsteps to Fusan。

And as the years came and went; now one; now another failed to

gather at the usual place。  Hans Amden was the first to die。  Jacob

Brinker; who was his road…mate; brought the news。  Jacob Brinker was

the last of the seven; and he was nearly ninety when he died;

outliving Tromp a scant two years。  I well remember the pair of

them; toward the last; worn and feeble; in beggars' rags; with

beggars' bowls; sunning themselves side by side on the cliffs;

telling old stories and cackling shrill…voiced like children。  And

Tromp would maunder over and over of how Johannes Maartens and the

cunies robbed the kings on Tabong Mountain; each embalmed in his

golden coffin with an embalmed maid on either side; and of how these

ancient proud ones crumbled to dust within the hour while the cunies

cursed and sweated at junking the coffins。



As sure as loot is loot; old Johannes Maartens would have got away

and across the Yellow Sea with his booty had it not been for the fog

next day that lost him。  That cursed fog!  A song was made of it;

that I heard and hated through all Cho…Sen to my dying day。  Here

run two lines of it:





〃Yanggukeni chajin anga

Wheanpong tora deunda;

The thick fog of the Westerners

Broods over Whean peak。〃





For forty years I was a beggar of Cho…Sen。  Of the fourteen of us

that were cast away only I survived。  The Lady Om was of the same

indomitable stuff; and we aged together。  She was a little;

weazened; toothless old woman toward the last; but ever she was the

wonder woman; and she carried my heart in hers to the end。  For an

old man; three score and ten; I still retained great strength。  My

face was withered; my yellow hair turned white; my broad shoulders

shrunken; and yet much of the strength of my sea…cuny days resided

in the muscles left me。



Thus it was that I was able to do what I shall now relate。  It was a

spring morning on the cliffs of Fusan; hard by the highway; that the

Lady Om and I sat warming in the sun。  We were in the rags of

beggary; prideless in the dust; and yet I was laughing heartily at

some mumbled merry quip of the Lady Om when a shadow fell upon us。

It was the great litter of Cho

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