THE NODDING TIGER

by Norman Hinsdale Pitman · from Chinese Wonder Book

fairy tale transformation hopeful Ages 8-14 3237 words 15 min read
Cover: THE NODDING TIGER

Adapted Version

CEFR A1 Age 5 709 words 4 min Canon 95/100

In the green mountains, a boy lived. His name was T'ang. He lived with his old mama. Mama T'ang loved her boy. T'ang loved his mama very much. Each day, T'ang cut wood. He sold the wood in the city. He brought home food for Mama. They were poor but happy. They smiled and ate side by side.

One day, T'ang went to the mountain. He did not come home. Mama T'ang waited and waited. The sun went down. But no T'ang. A kind neighbor came to her. "A big tiger scared T'ang away," he said. "T'ang had to go far away." Mama T'ang was so sad. Her boy was gone.

Mama T'ang picked up her walking stick. She walked to the city. It was a long walk. She was old and tired. But she did not stop. She found the Judge's big house. "Please help me," she said. "Please. A tiger took my son away. I am all alone."

The Judge looked at her. "A tiger?" he said. "Find a tiger?" he asked. Mama T'ang asked one more time. "Please help me." The Judge shook his head. Mama T'ang asked once more. "Please. Please help me." The Judge said, "Okay. I will send someone."

The Judge picked a helper named Li. Li was a little silly but very kind. "Li, go find the tiger!" said the Judge. Li opened his eyes wide. "Oh no! How can I find a tiger?"

Li went to the mountain. He looked and looked. But he could not find the tiger. He went back to the Judge. The Judge was not happy. "Try again, Li!" Li felt very sad. He went back to the mountain.

Li sat by a little temple. He was so tired. He began to cry. Then he heard a sound. A big tiger came out! Li was scared. But he did not run. "Please, Tiger," Li said softly. "An old mama is so sad. She is all alone. Her boy went away. She needs help. Come with me?" The tiger looked at Li. It listened. Then it nodded its big head. Yes!

The tiger walked with Li to the city. All the people looked and looked. "A tiger! A tiger!" they said. But the tiger was calm and quiet. It walked to the Judge's big house. The people followed. They were so amazed.

The Judge sat at his big table. He looked at the tiger. The tiger sat down. It was like a very big cat. "Tiger," said the Judge. "Did you scare T'ang away?" The tiger looked down. It felt sorry. Then it nodded its big head. Yes.

"Tiger, you made Mama T'ang very sad," said the Judge. "Now she is all alone. No one helps her. Will you take care of her? Will you bring her food?" The tiger sat very still. It thought and thought. Then it nodded its big head again. Yes! It would help.

The tiger walked out of the city. It went back to the mountain.

The next morning, Mama T'ang opened her door. There was food! Good fruit and fresh fish. Who put it there? She looked up. The big tiger sat by her gate. It watched her with soft eyes. Mama T'ang was scared at first. But the tiger purred. It purred like a big, big cat. It brought her food! Mama T'ang smiled.

Each day, the tiger brought good things. Fruit and fish and warm soft fur to touch. Mama T'ang pet the tiger's big head. The tiger purred and purred. It slept by her door each night. It was like a very big cat. They were friends now. They were a little home.

Many, many years went by. Mama T'ang got very, very old. One quiet night, she fell into a long, quiet sleep. The tiger sat by her bed. It was very, very sad. It purred softly one last time.

Then the tiger walked up the mountain. It walked up and up, one last time. People say it went to a pretty place in the sky. A place where kind hearts go. And that is the story of the Kind Tiger.

And if you are kind to others, others will be kind to you too. Goodnight, little one.

Original Story 3237 words · 15 min read

THE NODDING TIGER

Just outside the walls of a Chinese city there lived a young woodcutter named T'ang and his old mother, a woman of seventy. They were very poor and had a tiny one-room shanty, built of mud and grass, which they rented from a neighbour. Every day young T'ang rose bright and early and went up on the mountain near their house. There he spent the day cutting firewood to sell in the city near by. In the evening he would return home, take the wood to market, sell it, and bring back food for his mother and himself. Now, though these two people were poor, they were very happy, for the young man loved his mother dearly, and the old woman thought there was no one like her son in all the world. Their friends, however, felt sorry for them and said, "What [121] a pity we have no grasshoppers here, so that the T'angs could have some food from heaven!"

One day young T'ang got up before daylight and started for the hills, carrying his axe on his shoulder. He bade his mother good-bye, telling her that he would be back early with a heavier load of wood than usual, for the morrow would be a holiday and they must eat good food. All day long Widow T'ang waited patiently, saying to herself over and over as she went about her simple work, "The good boy, the good boy, how he loves his old mother!"

In the afternoon she began watching for his return—but in vain. The sun was sinking lower and lower in the west, but still he did not come. At last the old woman was frightened. "My poor son!" she muttered. "Something has happened to him." Straining her feeble eyes, she looked along the mountain path. Nothing was to be seen there but a flock of sheep following the shepherd. "Woe is me!" moaned the woman. "My boy! my boy!" She took her crutch from its corner and limped off to a neighbour's house to tell him of her trouble and beg him to go and look for the missing boy.

Now this neighbour was kind-hearted, and willing to help old Mother T'ang, for he felt very sorry for her. "There are many [122] wild beasts in the mountains," he said, shaking his head as he walked away with her, thinking to prepare the frightened woman for the worst, "and I fear that your son has been carried off by one of them." Widow T'ang gave a scream of horror and sank upon the ground. Her friend walked slowly up the mountain path, looking carefully for signs of a struggle. At last when he had gone half way up the slope he came to a little pile of torn clothing spattered with blood. The woodman's axe was lying by the side of the path, also his carrying pole and some rope. There could be no mistake: after making a brave fight, the poor youth had been carried off by a tiger.

Gathering up the torn garments, the man went sadly down the hill. He dreaded seeing the poor mother and telling her that her only boy was indeed gone for ever. At the foot of the mountain he found her still lying on the ground. When she looked up and saw what he was carrying, with a cry of despair she fainted away. She did not need to be told what had happened.

Friends bore her into the little house and gave her food, but they could not comfort her. "Alas!" she cried, "of what use is it to live? He was my only boy. Who will take care of me in my old age? Why have the gods treated me in this cruel way?"

She wept, tore her hair, and beat her chest, until people said [123] she had gone mad. The longer she mourned, the more violent she became.

The next day, however, much to the surprise of her neighbours, she set out for the city, making her way along slowly by means of her crutch. It was a pitiful sight to see her, so old, so feeble, and so lonely. Every one was sorry for her and pointed her out, saying, "See! the poor old soul has no one to help her!"

In the city she asked her way to the public hall. When she found the place she knelt at the front gate, calling out loudly and telling of her ill-fortune. Just at this moment the mandarin, or city judge, walked into the court room to try any cases which might be brought before him. He heard the old woman weeping and wailing outside, and bade one of the servants let her enter and tell him of her wrongs.

Now this was just what the Widow T'ang had come for. Calming herself, she hobbled into the great hall of trial.

"What is the matter, old woman? Why do you raise such an uproar in front of my yamen? Speak up quickly and tell me of your trouble."

"I am old and feeble," she began; "lame and almost blind. I have no money and no way of earning money. I have not one relative now in all the empire. I depended on my only son for a living. [124] Every day he climbed the mountain, for he was a woodcutter, and every evening he came back home, bringing enough money for our food. But yesterday he went and did not return. A mountain tiger carried him off and ate him, and now, alas! there seems to be no help for it—I must die of hunger. My bleeding heart cries out for justice. I have come into this hall to-day, to beg your worship to see that the slayer of my son is punished. Surely the law says that none may shed blood without giving his own blood in payment."

"But, woman, are you mad?" cried the mandarin, laughing loudly. "Did you not say it was a tiger that killed your son? How can a tiger be brought to justice? Of a truth, you must have lost your senses."

The judge's questions were of no avail. The Widow T'ang kept up her clamour. She would not be turned away until she had gained her purpose. The hall echoed with the noise of her howling. The mandarin could stand it no longer. "Hold! woman," he cried, "stop your shrieking. I will do what you ask. Only go home and wait until I summon you to court. The slayer of your son shall be caught and punished."

The judge was, of course, only trying to get rid of the demented mother, thinking that if she were only once out of his sight, he could [125] give orders not to let her into the hall again. The old woman, however, was too sharp for him. She saw through his plan and became more stubborn than ever.

"No, I cannot go," she answered, "until I have seen you sign the order for that tiger to be caught and brought into this judgment hall."

Now, as the judge was not really a bad man, he decided to humour the old woman in her strange plea. Turning to the assistants in the court room he asked which of them would be willing to go in search of the tiger. One of these men, named Li-neng, had been leaning against the wall, half asleep. He had been drinking heavily and so had not heard what had been going on in the room. One of his friends gave him a poke in the ribs just as the judge asked for volunteers.

Thinking the judge had called him by name, he stepped forward, knelt on the floor, saying, "I, Li-neng, can go and do the will of your worship."

"Very well, you will do," answered the judge. "Here is your order. Go forth and do your duty." So saying, he handed the warrant to Li-neng. "Now, old woman, are you satisfied?" he continued.

[126] "Quite satisfied, your worship," she replied.

"Then go home and wait there until I send for you."

Mumbling a few words of thanks, the unhappy mother left the building.

When Li-neng went outside the court room, his friends crowded round him. "Drunken sot!" they laughed; "do you know what you have done?"

Li-neng shook his head. "Just a little business for the mandarin, isn't it? Quite easy."

"Call it easy, if you like. What! man, arrest a tiger, a man-eating tiger and bring him to the city! Better go and say good-bye to your father and mother. They will never see you again."

Li-neng slept off his drunkenness, and then saw that his friends were right. He had been very foolish. But surely the judge had meant the whole thing only as a joke! No such order had ever been written before! It was plain that the judge had hit on this plan simply to get rid of the wailing old woman. Li-neng took the warrant back to the judgment hall and told the mandarin that the tiger could not be found.

But the judge was in no mood for joking. "Can't be found? And why not? You agreed to arrest this tiger. Why is it that [127] to-day you try to get out of your promise? I can by no means permit this, for I have given my word to satisfy the old woman in her cry for justice."

Li-neng knelt and knocked his head on the floor. "I was drunk," he cried, "when I gave my promise. I knew not what you were asking. I can catch a man, but not a tiger. I know nothing of such matters. Still, if you wish it, I can go into the hills and hire hunters to help me."

"Very well, it makes no difference how you catch him, as long as you bring him into court. If you fail in your duty, there is nothing left but to beat you until you succeed. I give you five days."

During the next few days Li-neng left no stone unturned in trying to find the guilty tiger. The best hunters in the country were employed. Night and day they searched the hills, hiding in mountain caves, watching and waiting, but finding nothing. It was all very trying for Li-neng, since he now feared the heavy hands of the judge more than the claws of the tiger. On the fifth day he had to report his failure. He received a thorough beating, fifty blows on the back. But that was not the worst of it. During the next six weeks, try as he would, he could find no traces of the missing animal. At the end of each five days, he got another beating for his [128] pains. The poor fellow was in despair. Another month of such treatment would lay him on his deathbed. This he knew very well, and yet he had little hope. His friends shook their heads when they saw him. "He is drawing near the wood," they said to each other, meaning that he would soon be in his coffin. "Why don't you flee the country?" they asked him. "Follow the tiger's example. You see he has escaped completely. The judge would make no effort to catch you if you should go across the border into the next province."

Li-neng shook his head on hearing this advice. He had no desire to leave his family for ever, and he felt sure of being caught and put to death if he should try to run away.

One day after all the hunters had given up the search in disgust and gone back to their homes in the valley, Li-neng entered a mountain temple to pray. The tears rained down his cheeks as he knelt before the great fierce-looking idol. "Alas! I am a dead man!" he moaned between his prayers; "a dead man, for now there is no hope. Would that I had never touched a drop of wine!"

Just then he heard a slight rustling near by. Looking up, he saw a huge tiger standing at the temple gate. But Li-neng was no longer afraid of tigers. He knew there was only one way to save [129] himself. "Ah," he said, looking the great cat straight in the eye, "you have come to eat me, have you? Well, I fear you would find my flesh a trifle tough, since I have been beaten with four hundred blows during these six weeks. You are the same fellow that carried off the woodman last month, aren't you? This woodman was an only son, the sole support of an old mother. Now this poor woman has reported you to the mandarin, who, in turn, has had a warrant drawn up for your arrest. I have been sent out to find you and lead you to trial. For some reason or other you have acted the coward, and remained in hiding. This has been the cause of my beating. Now I don't want to suffer any longer as a result of your murder. You must come with me to the city and answer the charge of killing the woodman."

All the time Li-neng was speaking, the tiger listened closely. When the man was silent, the animal made no effort to escape, but, on the contrary, seemed willing and ready to be captured. He bent his head forward and let Li-neng slip a strong chain over it. Then he followed the man quietly down the mountain, through the crowded streets of the city, into the court room. All along the way there was great excitement. "The man-slaying tiger has been caught," shouted the people. "He is being led to trial."

[130] The crowd followed Li-neng into the hall of justice. When the judge walked in, every one became as quiet as the grave. All were filled with wonder at the strange sight of a tiger being called before a judge.

The great animal did not seem to be afraid of those who were watching so curiously. He sat down in front of the mandarin, for all the world like a huge cat. The judge rapped on the table as a signal that all was ready for the trial.

"Tiger," said he, turning toward the prisoner, "did you eat the woodman whom you are charged with killing?"

The tiger gravely nodded his head.

"Yes, he killed my boy!" screamed the aged mother. "Kill him! Give him the death that he deserves!"

"A life for a life is the law of the land," continued the judge, paying no attention to the forlorn mother, but looking the accused directly in the eye. "Did you not know it? You have robbed a helpless old woman of her only son. There are no relatives to support her. She is crying for vengeance. You must be punished for your crime. The law must be enforced. However, I am not a cruel judge. If you can promise to take the place of this widow's son and support the woman in her old age, I am quite willing to spare you from a disgraceful death. What say you, will you accept my offer?"

[131] The gaping people craned their necks to see what would happen, and once more they were surprised to see the savage beast nod his head in silent agreement.

"Very well, then, you are free to return to your mountain home; only, of course, you must remember your promise."

The chains were taken from the tiger's neck, and the great animal walked silently out of the yamen, down the street, and through the gate opening towards his beloved mountain cave.

Once more the old woman was very angry. As she hobbled from the room, she cast sour glances at the judge, muttering over and over again, "Who ever heard of a tiger taking the place of a son? A pretty game this is, to catch the brute, and then to set him free." There was nothing for her to do, however, but to return home, for the judge had given strict orders that on no account was she to appear before him again.

Almost broken-hearted she entered her desolate hovel at the foot of the mountain. Her neighbours shook their heads as they saw her. "She cannot live long," they said. "She has the look of death on her wrinkled face. Poor soul! she has nothing to live for, nothing to keep her from starving."

But they were mistaken. Next morning when the old woman [132] went outside to get a breath of fresh air she found a newly killed deer in front of her door. Her tiger-son had begun to keep his promise, for she could see the marks of his claws on the dead animal's body. She took the carcass into the house and dressed it for the market. On the city streets next day she had no trouble in selling the flesh and skin for a handsome sum of money. All had heard of the tiger's first gift, and no one was anxious to drive a close bargain.

Laden with food, the happy woman went home rejoicing, with money enough to keep her for many a day. A week later the tiger came to her door with a roll of cloth and some money in his mouth. He dropped these new gifts at her feet and ran away without even waiting for her thank-you. The Widow T'ang now saw that the judge had acted wisely. She stopped grieving for her dead son and began to love in his stead the handsome animal that had come to take his place so willingly.

The tiger grew much attached to his foster-mother and often purred contentedly outside her door, waiting for her to come and stroke his soft fur. He no longer had the old desire to kill. The sight of blood was not nearly so tempting as it had been in his younger days. Year after year he brought the weekly offerings to his mistress until she was as well provided for as any other widow in the country.

[133] At last in the course of nature the good old soul died. Kind friends laid her away in her last resting place at the foot of the great mountain. There was money enough left out of what she had saved to put up a handsome tombstone, on which this story was written just as you have read it here. The faithful tiger mourned long for his dear mistress. He lay on her grave, wailing like a child that had lost its mother. Long he listened for the voice he had loved so well, long he searched the mountain-slopes, returning each night to the empty cottage, but all in vain. She whom he loved was gone for ever.

One night he vanished from the mountain, and from that day to this no one in that province has ever seen him. Some who know this story say that he died of grief in a secret cave which he had long used as a hiding-place. Others add, with a wise shrug of the shoulders, that, like Shanwang, he was taken to the Western Heaven, there to be rewarded for his deeds of virtue and to live as a fairy for ever afterwards.

[134]


Story DNA fairy tale · hopeful

Moral

True justice can be found in unexpected places, and compassion can transform even the most savage heart.

Plot Summary

A poor woodcutter is killed by a tiger, leaving his elderly mother destitute. The grieving mother demands justice from the city mandarin, who, to appease her, issues a warrant for the tiger's arrest. A hapless official, Li-neng, is tasked with the impossible, enduring repeated beatings for his failure. In despair, Li-neng encounters the tiger and convinces it to surrender. At trial, the tiger confesses by nodding and is offered a choice: death or becoming the old woman's provider. The tiger accepts, faithfully caring for her until her death, transforming from a predator into a devoted foster-son, and then vanishes, leaving a legacy of unexpected compassion and justice.

Themes

justice and retributioncompassion and mercyunconventional family bondsduty and responsibility

Emotional Arc

suffering to triumph

Writing Style

Voice: third person omniscient
Pacing: moderate
Descriptive: moderate
Techniques: rule of three, direct address to reader (at the end)

Narrative Elements

Conflict: person vs society (Widow T'ang vs. legal system), person vs nature (human vs. tiger), person vs self (Li-neng's despair, tiger's transformation)
Ending: bittersweet
Magic: talking/understanding animals (tiger), animal transformation (from killer to provider)
The Nodding Tiger (symbol of unexpected justice, transformation, and duty)The Warrant (symbol of bureaucratic absurdity and the power of persistence)The Crutch (symbol of Widow T'ang's vulnerability and determination)

Cultural Context

Origin: Chinese
Era: timeless fairy tale

Reflects traditional Chinese societal structures, the importance of family, and the legal system's power, even if satirized in its application to an animal.

Plot Beats (15)

  1. T'ang, a woodcutter, lives happily with his elderly mother, supporting her by selling firewood.
  2. T'ang goes to the mountain for wood and does not return; his mother and a neighbor find his torn clothes, confirming he was killed by a tiger.
  3. Widow T'ang, distraught, travels to the city to demand justice from the mandarin for her son's death.
  4. The mandarin, initially dismissive, is pressured by the old woman's persistence to issue a warrant for the tiger's arrest.
  5. A drunken official, Li-neng, is mistakenly assigned the impossible task of capturing the tiger.
  6. Li-neng repeatedly fails to find the tiger and is severely beaten by the mandarin as punishment.
  7. Desperate, Li-neng encounters the tiger in a mountain temple and, explaining his plight, convinces the tiger to come to trial.
  8. The tiger follows Li-neng to the city, causing a sensation, and appears before the mandarin.
  9. The mandarin questions the tiger, who nods in affirmation to having killed T'ang.
  10. The mandarin offers the tiger a choice: death or to take the place of T'ang and care for his mother.
  11. The tiger nods again, accepting the terms, and is released.
  12. Widow T'ang is initially angry at the outcome but soon finds the tiger leaving provisions (a deer, cloth, money) at her door.
  13. The tiger faithfully provides for Widow T'ang for many years, becoming a beloved foster-son, and loses its desire to kill.
  14. Widow T'ang dies peacefully, and the tiger mourns her deeply at her grave.
  15. The tiger vanishes from the mountain, with some believing it died of grief and others that it ascended to heaven for its virtuous deeds.

Characters 5 characters

Widow T'ang ★ protagonist

human elderly female

Old, feeble, lame, almost blind, wrinkled face

Attire: Simple, likely peasant dress appropriate for ancient China, carries a crutch

An old, limping woman with a crutch, her face etched with sorrow

Devoted, grieving, determined, initially despairing but later accepting and loving

Image Prompt & Upload
An elderly East Asian woman in her late 60s with a stern yet kind face, deep wrinkles around her eyes and mouth, and silver hair pulled into a tight, practical bun. She wears a simple, faded indigo blue tunic over dark trousers, with a worn gray apron tied at her waist. Her posture is straight and resilient, standing with one hand resting on a gnarled wooden walking stick and the other clutching a small, cloth-wrapped bundle to her chest. Her expression is one of quiet determination and weary wisdom, looking directly ahead with dark, observant eyes. Plain white background, full body visible head to toe, single figure, no watermark, no text, no signature.

T'ang ○ minor

human young adult male

None explicitly given, but strong enough to be a woodcutter

Attire: Woodcutter's simple clothes, carries an axe and carrying pole

A young man with an axe over his shoulder

Hardworking, devoted to his mother

Image Prompt & Upload
A young boy of about twelve years old, with neat black hair and a respectful, attentive expression. He stands straight, holding a leather-bound book against his chest with both hands. He is dressed in a simple but formal dark blue robe with subtle embroidered trim at the collar and cuffs, worn over lighter trousers and soft shoes. Plain white background, full body visible head to toe, single figure, no watermark, no text, no signature.

The Nodding Tiger ◆ supporting

animal adult non-human

Large, savage beast, man-slaying, soft fur (later)

A large tiger, sitting like a cat, gravely nodding its head

Initially savage and predatory, later remorseful, loyal, devoted, and gentle

Image Prompt & Upload
A large, fluffy anthropomorphic tiger with soft orange fur and bold black stripes, wearing a cozy knitted scarf around its neck. The tiger has a gentle, wise expression with kind amber eyes, and its head is slightly tilted in a nodding motion. It stands on its hind legs in a friendly, welcoming posture, with one paw raised as if in greeting. Plain white background, full body visible head to toe, single figure, no watermark, no text, no signature.

The Mandarin ◆ supporting

human adult male

None explicitly given

Attire: Official robes of a Chinese city judge/magistrate (mandarin)

A Chinese judge in official robes, seated at a court table

Initially dismissive and amused, later wise, fair, and clever

Image Prompt & Upload
A middle-aged man with a neatly trimmed black beard and sharp, intelligent eyes. He wears layered robes of deep blue and gold silk, embroidered with intricate geometric patterns. His posture is calm and observant, one hand resting on a carved wooden staff. He stands in a serene courtyard with a stone floor and a single ornate lantern hanging in the background. Plain white background, full body visible head to toe, single figure, no watermark, no text, no signature.

Li-neng ○ minor

human adult male

None explicitly given, but strong enough to capture a tiger

Attire: Likely simple clothes, carries a chain

A man leading a chained tiger

Brave, determined, resourceful

Image Prompt & Upload
A young East Asian boy around 6-8 years old, with a round face, bright curious eyes, and short, slightly messy black hair. He wears a simple, loose-fitting tunic of undyed linen, tied with a cloth belt, and simple trousers. On his feet are straw sandals. He has a friendly, slightly mischievous smile, and is holding a small, hand-carved wooden bird in one hand. He stands in a relaxed, curious posture on a dirt path in a sunny village, with soft afternoon light. Plain white background, full body visible head to toe, single figure, no watermark, no text, no signature.
Locations 4 locations
No image yet

T'ang's Shanty

indoor implied temperate, no specific weather mentioned

A tiny one-room shanty, built of mud and grass, located just outside the walls of a Chinese city at the foot of a mountain.

Mood: initially poor but happy, later desolate and sorrowful, eventually comfortable and content

Home of T'ang and his mother, where she mourns his loss and later receives gifts from the tiger.

mud walls grass roof crutch in corner door
Image Prompt & Upload
At dusk, a tiny one-room shanty of packed mud and thatched grass sits at the edge of a worn dirt path. It is nestled under the shadow of a great, ancient city wall of grey stone, which towers in the mid-ground. Beyond the wall, the silhouette of a misty mountain rises against a sky of deepening indigo and peach. A single, warm amber light glows from within the shanty's small window, illuminating the rough texture of the walls and a few scattered wildflowers at its base. The scene is quiet, with soft shadows and a gentle evening mist clinging to the ground. no border, no frame, no watermark, no text, no signature, edge-to-edge illustration
No image yet

The Mountain Path / Slope

transitional morning, afternoon no specific weather mentioned, implied normal conditions for woodcutting

A path leading up a mountain near the city, where T'ang cut wood. Later, a specific spot on the slope where his torn clothing and axe were found.

Mood: initially industrious, later ominous and tragic

T'ang's workplace and the site of his presumed death by the tiger.

axe carrying pole rope torn clothing blood spatter
Image Prompt & Upload
A winding dirt path cuts through an ancient, mist-shrouded pine forest on a steep mountain slope, leading upward toward a distant, hazy silhouette of a walled city. Dawn light filters through the dense canopy, casting long, cool shadows and illuminating swirling patches of ground fog. The air is damp and still. In a small, mossy clearing beside the path, a tattered piece of rough, ochre-colored cloth is snagged on a gnarled root, and a well-used woodcutter's axe lies half-buried in the dark, damp earth. The surrounding forest is thick with ferns and fallen needles, the trees looming like silent witnesses. no border, no frame, no watermark, no text, no signature, edge-to-edge illustration.
No image yet

The Public Hall / Hall of Justice (Yamen)

indoor daytime no specific weather mentioned

A grand hall in the city where the mandarin holds court. It has a front gate and a courtroom.

Mood: formal, authoritative, initially chaotic due to the mother's wailing, later tense and wondrous during the tiger's trial

Where Widow T'ang seeks justice and where the tiger is brought to trial and makes his promise.

front gate courtroom mandarin's table crowd
Image Prompt & Upload
Sunset casts a warm, golden light over the grand courtyard of the Public Hall. A sweeping stone path leads to the imposing front gate, its curved roof tiles glowing amber and crimson. Carved wooden pillars flank the entrance, guarding the view into the open-air courtroom. Inside, a raised platform and a heavy desk sit under the vast, shadowed interior, illuminated by the last rays of sun streaming through the latticed windows. Potted bamboo and stone lanterns line the path, their shapes long in the fading light. The air is still, with a sense of solemn authority hanging in the quiet dusk. no border, no frame, no watermark, no text, no signature, edge-to-edge illustration.
No image yet

Widow T'ang's Grave

outdoor night no specific weather mentioned

Her last resting place at the foot of the great mountain, with a handsome tombstone.

Mood: somber, peaceful, mournful

The final resting place of Widow T'ang, where the faithful tiger mourns her.

tombstone mountain backdrop
Image Prompt & Upload
At dusk, a solitary, handsome tombstone of polished grey stone stands at the foot of a great, mist-shrouded mountain. Soft, fading light casts long shadows across the quiet grave, nestled in a patch of wild grass and small, pale flowers. The mountain's lower slopes are covered in dark, silent pine forests, its peak lost in the evening clouds. The atmosphere is still and reverent, with a palette of deep greens, cool greys, and the last hints of amber light on the horizon. no border, no frame, no watermark, no text, no signature, edge-to-edge illustration