- You have recently read
-
- Of the Pretty Girl and the Seven Jealous Women
- The Story of the Three Calenders, Sons of Kings, and of Five Ladies of Bagdad
- The Favorite of Fortune and the Child of Ill Luck
- The story of princess Hase. A story of old Japan
- The Son of the King of Erin, and the Giant of Loch Léin
- The three Daughters of the King of the East, and the Son of a King in Erin
- Birth of Fin MacCumhail and Origin of the Fenians of Erin
- Fin MacCumhail and the Fenians of Erin in the Castle of Fear Dubh
- Fin MacCumhail, the Seven Brothers, and the King of France
- The Golden Duck: The Story of Prince Raduz and the Faithful Ludmila
- Clean
The story of Urashima Taro, the fisher lad
My name is Urashima Taro. Where have my parents gone whom I left here?"
A very bewildered expression came over the face of the man, and, still gazing intently on Urashima's face, he said:
"What? Are you Urashima Taro?"
"Yes," said the fisherman, "I am Urashima Taro!"
"Ha, ha!" laughed the man, "you must not make such jokes. It is true that once upon a time a man called Urashima Taro did live in this village, but that is a story three hundred years old. He could not possibly be alive now!"
When Urashima heard these strange words he was frightened, and said:
"Please, please, you must not joke with me, I am greatly perplexed. I am really Urashima Taro, and I certainly have not lived three hundred years. Till four or five days ago I lived on this spot. Tell me what I want to know without more joking, please."
But the man's face grew more and more grave, and he answered:
"You may or may not be Urashima Taro, I don't know. But the Urashima Taro of whom I have heard is a man who lived three hundred years ago. Perhaps you are his spirit come to revisit your old home?"
"Why do you mock me?" said Urashima. "I am no spirit! I am a living man—do you not see my feet;" and "don-don," he stamped on the ground, first with one foot and then with the other to show the man. (Japanese ghosts have no feet.)
"But Urashima Taro lived three hundred years ago, that is all I know; it is written in the village chronicles," persisted the man, who could not believe what the fisherman said.
Urashima was lost in bewilderment and trouble. He stood looking all around him, terribly puzzled, and, indeed, something in the appearance of everything was different to what he remembered before he went away, and the awful feeling came over him that what the man said was perhaps true. He seemed to be in a strange dream. The few days he had spent in the Sea King's palace beyond the sea had not been days at all: they had been hundreds of years, and in that time his parents had died and all the people he had ever known, and the village had written down his story.




