The Magic Kettle
Right in the middle of Japan, high up among the mountains, an
old man lived in his little house. He was very proud of it, and never tired of
admiring the whiteness of his straw mats, and the pretty papered walls, which
in warm weather always slid back, so that the smell of the trees and flowers
might come in.
One day he was standing looking at the mountain opposite,
when he heard a kind of rumbling noise in the room behind him. He turned round,
and in the corner he beheld a rusty old iron kettle, which could not have seen
the light of day for many years. How the kettle got there the old man did not
know, but he took it up and looked it over carefully, and when he found that it
was quite whole he cleaned the dust off it and carried it into his kitchen.
'That was a piece of luck,' he said, smiling to himself; 'a good
kettle costs money, and it is as well to have a second one at hand in case of
need; mine is getting worn out, and the water is already beginning to come
through its bottom.'
Then he took the other kettle off the fire, filled the new
one with water, and put it in its place.
No sooner was the water in the kettle getting warm than a
strange thing happened, and the man, who was standing by, thought he must be
dreaming. First the handle of the kettle gradually changed its shape and became
a head, and the spout grew into a tail, while out of the body sprang four paws,
and in a few minutes the man found himself watching, not a kettle, but a
tanuki! The creature jumped off the
fire, and bounded about the room like a kitten, running up the walls and over
the ceiling, till the old man was in an agony lest his pretty room should be
spoilt. He cried to a neighbour for help, and between them they managed to
catch the tanuki, and shut him up safely in a wooden chest. Then, quite
exhausted, they sat down on the mats, and consulted together what they should
do with this troublesome beast. At length they decided to sell him, and bade a
child who was passing send them a certain tradesman called Jimmu.
When Jimmu arrived, the old man told him that he had something
which he wished to get rid of, and lifted the lid of the wooden chest, where he
had shut up the tanuki. But, to his surprise, no tanuki was there, nothing but
the kettle he had found in the corner.
It was certainly very odd, but the man remembered what had taken place
on the fire, and did not want to keep the kettle any more, so after a little
bargaining about the price, Jimmu went away carrying the kettle with him.
Now Jimmu had not gone very far before he felt that the
kettle was getting heavier and heavier, and by the time he reached home he was
so tired that he was thankful to put it down in the corner of his room, and
then forgot all about it. In the middle of the night, however, he was awakened
by a loud noise in the corner where the kettle stood, and raised himself up in
bed to see what it was. But nothing was there except the kettle, which seemed
quiet enough. He thought that he must
have been dreaming, and fell asleep again, only to be roused a second time by
the same disturbance. He jumped up and went to the corner, and by the light of
the lamp that he always kept burning he saw that the kettle had become a
tanuki, which was running round after his tail. After he grew weary of that, he
ran on the balcony, where he turned several somersaults, from pure gladness of
heart. The tradesman was much troubled as to what to do with the animal, and it
was only towards morning that he managed to get any sleep; but when he opened
his eyes again there was no tanuki, only the old kettle he had left there the
night before.
As soon as he had tidied his house, Jimmu set off to tell his
story to a friend next door. The man listened quietly, and did not appear so
surprised as Jimmu expected, for he recollected having heard, in his youth,
something about a wonder-working kettle. 'Go and travel with it, and show it
off,' said he, 'and you will become a rich man; but be careful first to ask the
tanuki's leave, and also to perform some magic ceremonies to prevent him from
running away at the sight of the people.'
Jimmu thanked his friend for his counsel, which he followed
exactly. The tanuki's consent was obtained, a booth was built, and a notice was
hung up outside it inviting the people to come and witness the most wonderful
transformation that ever was seen.
They came in crowds, and the kettle was passed from hand to
hand, and they were allowed to examine it all over, and even to look inside.
Then Jimmu took it back, and setting it on the platform, commanded it to become
a tanuki. In an instant the handle began to change into a head, and the spout
into a tail, while the four paws appeared at the sides. 'Dance,' said Jimmu,
and the tanuki did his steps, and moved first on one side and then on the
other, till the people could not stand still any longer, and began to dance
too. Gracefully he led the fan dance,
and glided without a pause into the shadow dance and the umbrella dance, and it
seemed as if he might go on dancing for ever. And so very likely he would, if
Jimmu had not declared he had danced enough, and that the booth must now be
closed.
Day after day the booth was so full it was hardly possible to
enter it, and what the neighbour foretold had come to pass, and Jimmu was a
rich man. Yet he did not feel happy. He was an honest man, and he thought that
he owed some of his wealth to the man from whom he had bought the kettle. So,
one morning, he put a hundred gold pieces into it, and hanging the kettle once
more on his arm, he returned to the seller of it. 'I have no right to keep it
any longer,' he added when he had ended his tale, 'so I have brought it back to
you, and inside you will find a hundred gold pieces as the price of its hire.'
The man thanked Jimmu, and said that few people would have
been as honest as he. And the kettle brought them both luck, and everything
went well with them till they died, which they did when they were very old,
respected by everyone.
[Adapted from Japanische Mahrchen]
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