Wang the Ninth
t lay ten li or Chinese miles from the great imperial highway. He was the eighth child; that was why, according to immemorial custom, he was called th
dren of this land are suckled until they can run) he was unceremonio
t adventures,-and was the natural aftermath of a curiousl
he and his father had become the last survivors in a disrupted family. For his mother, too, had tired of privation. She had sat ominously quiet for one whole week and had then slippe
e had come a volcanic outburst of hurt professional pride. He was totally unable to reconcile himself to the idea that he had been abandoned in favour of another such as he-and for no better reason that ther
s few pots and pans and the implements of his trade (including the unwieldy bellows) in the other, and had marched down the rutted vi
seen the broad road leading to the capital, and the carts and the travellers in their handsome clothing, and the long camel-trains with their rich loads of merchan
uld any one mind? As far as the eye could reach there was nothing but brown country-the great Northern plains stretched into infinity and looked upon this evanescent emotion mu
feet, tightened his cord belt, and smearing the tears from his seamed face,
than that a child is a great blessing, a jewel, because it is of one's flesh and a kind of indefinite prolongation of one's endeavours to conquer the devil. Disaster had been for him like a huge river in spate which had rushe
little legs kicked with vigour, and the arms with t
was called the Ninth, now thoroughly
yet kindly, brought back from
tasteful but which was all that he had. It was the work of a few minutes to light the tiny portable whiteclay stove which he had included in
ain, struggling to ge
beginning to pack up again. "To the
ed to his destiny. On and on he tramped, pushing the creaking wheelbarrow through the chasm of space and sometimes exchanging remarks with the passing muleteers and camel-drivers. Traffic was growing heavier as the city was approached and a
and slept under a tree; but ere two hours
comforts, he pressed on tirelessly-determined to reach his objective. The creaking wheel was a veritable lullaby to the child who sl
hen at last in the middle of the night, when full forty miles had be
ruptly and the jer
me the inev
nt ov
n his rude, guttural voice
lding him tightly in his ar
-wall. Beyond there is a great gate through
epended upon strict attention. The father felt its little body taut under the ragged blue clothes.
ired the father at last, feel
old nation can speak. "It is good," it repeated, nodding i
the basket, and the father seizing the han