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Chinese Fable on Luck
1 There once was a farmer. One
day the farmer's only horse broke out of the corral and ran away. The farmer's neighbors,
all hearing of the horse running away, came to the farmer's house to view the corral. As they
stood there, the neighbors all said, "Oh what bad luck!" The farmer replied,
"Perhaps."
2 About a week later, the horse returned, bringing with
it a whole herd of wild horses, which the farmer and his son quickly corralled. The neighbors,
hearing of the corralling of the horses, came to see for themselves. As they stood there looking at
the corral filled with horses, the neighbors said, "Oh what good luck!" The farmer replied,
"Perhaps."
3 A couple of weeks later, the farmer's son's
leg was badly broken when he was thrown from a horse he was trying to break. A few days later the
broken leg became infected and the son became delirious with fever. The neighbors, all hearing of the
incident, came to see the son. As they stood there, the neighbors said, "Oh what bad luck!"
The farmer replied, "Perhaps."
4 At that same time in China, a war
broke out between two rival warlords. In need of more soldiers, a captain came to the village to
conscript young men to fight in the war. When the captain came to take the farmer's son, he
found the young man with a broken leg--delirious with fever. Knowing there was no way the son could
fight, the captain left him there. A few days later, the son's fever broke. The neighbors,
hearing of the son's not being taken to fight in the war and of his return to good health, all
came to see him. As they stood there, each one said, "Oh what good luck!" The farmer
replied, "Perhaps."
An East Indian Fable of Luck
1 A king
once sat with his minister and asked, “Do you believe in
luck?”
2 To which the minister replied, “I do
indeed.”
3 “Ahh,” sighed the king, “Can you prove
that luck exists?”
4 “Yes,” said the minister, “I
believe I can, but it will take a few days.” The minister excused himself and walked into the
neighboring village. He talked to several people trying to find those who believed in luck, and those
who believed in themselves as the maker of their own luck. Finally, the minister invited two men to
come to the palace for the night.
5 The man who believed in luck ran home to
tell his wife of his good fortune. While the man who believed in his own luck went home to tell his
wife that, by his own wits, he had been invited to the palace.
6 Both men
were received at the palace and given a series of tasks to complete. The man who believed in luck
leaned toward his companion and said, “Aren’t we lucky men to be so
honored?”
7 “Nonsense! I am here because the minister recognized
in me something special. They were lucky to find me!”
8 As night fell,
the minister took the two men to the room that they would share for the night. As the last of the
sun’s beams faded the men could see a small bag suspended above them from the ceiling. It was
too high for them to reach and as the room became dark the man who thought he made his own luck
grumbled, “I’m hungry. How wrong of them to work us all day and not offer us a single
thing for our bellies.”
9 “It’s just our luck I guess. We
were honored to find work, but unlucky in their forgetting about our hunger. Maybe tomorrow will
bring refreshments.”
10 “I’ll not wait for your luck! I
will get that bag, perhaps this is the last test to see if we will make our own luck and feed
ourselves!” cried the man who made his own luck. “Now get up and let me on your
shoulders!”
11 The man who believed in luck said, “I will do no
such thing. I am comfortable here and will not take a gift that has not been given.” He turned
over and tried to get to sleep. The other man glared at him and began stacking furniture so that he
could climb up to the sack.
12 As the man reached the top of the stack, the
room became very dark. He had the sack in his hands and carefully opened it. He could feel small peas
and stones mixed together and he placed a pea in mouth and enjoyed the fruits of his labor. Then he
placed another in his mouth, but it was a stone and so he spit it on the man below saying,
“Here is your luck, you fool. This is what you get for being lazy and sleeping
there.”
13 The man with the bag repeated his actions until he had
eaten all of the peas and spit the stones on the man below. He then settled down to sleep on top of
the stack because he could not see to get down. When he awoke the other man was laughing and dancing
around as the minister smiled and led him out of the room.
14
“Wait,” called the man on the stack, “why are you so
happy?”
15 “Because the stones you thought you spit down on me
were diamonds. You had a meal, and I will now have meals for the rest of my life. I’m so lucky!
Thank-you for giving this fool a fortune!”
16 The minister reported
back to the king and said, “Sire, there is such a thing as luck, but I think that it is as rare
as a bag of peas mixed with diamonds. So I think it would be best that none of us should hope to live
by luck.”
What happens in the Chinese fable just before the captain finds the farmers
son?
a. | The son breaks his leg and gets an infection after being thrown from a
horse. | c. | The horses turn on the son and break his leg in several different
places. | b. | The son catches wild horses that come back with the horse they
lost. | d. | The son loses their
horse after it breaks out of the corral and runs wild. |
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