FANCHA and the MAGPIE
by William Elliot Griffis · from Korean Fairy Tales
Adapted Version
New rulers came to a big land. They wanted all to know they were special. These people were the Manchu. They lived in cold mountains. They rode horses very well. They were strong warriors. They came to a rich land. They became rulers of this big land. They ruled China and Korea. They had a big empire now.
The Manchu rulers lived in big palaces. They wore fine clothes. But they thought of their old life. They were once simple people. They lived in tents. They ate simple food. The people they ruled did not know this. The King wanted people to respect them. He wanted a special story. His folk must be from a special place.
The King asked his wise men for help. "How can they think we are special?" he asked. Wise Green Lamps was the oldest. He wore big green glasses. He bowed low to the King. "Sire," he said, "I know an old woman. She tells stories of long ago. Her name is Old Mrs. Crinkles."
The King called for Old Mrs. Crinkles. She was very, very old. Her face had many lines. Her back was bent from age. She walked slowly into the room. She bowed to the King. He told her to sit down. "Tell us a special story," he said. Old Mrs. Crinkles began her tale.
Long ago, three ladies lived in sky. They were very special. They saw a nice place below. It had big, white mountains. A clear lake shone there. The ladies came down to earth. They wanted to swim in the lake. They took off their robes. They went into the water.
The Sky Maiden was the youngest. She left her robe on the sand. A magpie flew high above. It carried a red fruit. The magpie dropped the fruit. It fell right on her robe. The Sky Maiden ate the fruit. It tasted very good. A baby grew inside her. She named her son Fancha the Leader.
Fancha the Leader grew up. His mother told him he was special. He was a sky-born son. He was very kind and brave. He wanted to help people. He met tribes that at times fought. Fancha the Leader helped them. He became a great leader.
Fancha the Leader built a big city. He had a wife and many sons. His folk grew strong and happy. But people still had big fights. One day, a very big fight happened. Fancha the Leader was lost. All his other sons were lost too. Only one young son was left. His name was Young Fancha.
Bad people chased Young Fancha. They wanted to catch him. Young Fancha ran very fast. He ran across wide fields. He ran into a dark forest. The trees were thick there. He hoped to hide from them. The bad people were close behind.
Young Fancha stood very still. A magpie flew down. It landed on his head. The magpie was a sacred bird. The bad people came into the forest. They looked all around. They saw Young Fancha. But they saw the bird too. They thought he was a tree stump. They ran past him.
Young Fancha was safe now. He walked to a new place. The bad people gave up the hunt. Old Mrs. Crinkles smiled. "That is my story," she said. "Young Fancha was very special. He was your first father. He was your folk, King. Your folk is from the sky."
The King was very happy. He liked the special story. His folk was from the sky! He gave Old Mrs. Crinkles many nice gifts. He gave Wise Green Lamps nice gifts too. They helped him so much. People would believe his folk was special now. This story made all happy.
And so, the King had a good story. All knew his folk was special. The King was very happy.
Original Story
FANCHA AND THE MAGPIE
A thousand years ago or more, there was a tribe in the cold and desert land of the Tartars, north of Korea, which grew to be famous in that part of the world. The men let their hair grow long and then plaited it into a long braid that hung down their backs, but they shaved the front of their heads. These people were called Manchus.
Almost from babyhood they were trained to ride on horses, and in time they became such bold horsemen and warriors, that they swooped down in thousands like clouds from their mountain land into warmer and richer regions. They had terrible bows and arrows, spears and swords, and they won many victories, so that other tribes joined them. They captured great China and invaded Korea.
As long as they had been wandering tribes in the desert, they were poor and lived on plain food that the grassy plains and forests could furnish, such as nuts, herbs, the milk of mares, and mutton. Their clothes were made of the wool from their own sheep. They were not proud, except of their strength, and they never asked who their grandfathers were.
But it was very different when they came to be rulers of a vast empire, rich and great like China, which had books and writing and a history of thousands of years. The elegant Chinese gentlemen and nobles used to call their conquerors the “horsey Tartars.” So they learned to wash and perfume themselves, and to care for jade, and tea, and porcelain, and silk, and other things Chinese.
Now it came to pass that when these people out of the desert sat on the thrones, and wore crowns on their heads, and dressed in satin, with jeweled robes and velvet shoes, they wanted to know who had been their ancestors long ago, and whence they came.
It would not do to believe that the fathers and mothers of so mighty a race were once common folks who in the distant deserts lived on acorns and pine nuts, with horse meat often, and mutton occasionally, and mare’s milk for dessert, or that they dressed in sheep skin and tended horses like stable boys.
Oh no! If the common folks, whom they now governed and made obey them, knew that the nobles who now lived in Peking and bullied the Koreans were once only stable and butcher boys, and had no houses but lived only in tents, there would surely be trouble. These Koreans and Chinese might disobey and rebel. They might even cut off their pigtails, which the Tartars had forced them to wear, and clip their locks, like men in Europe and America. These white-faced and bearded foreigners they called “Southern Barbarians,” because their ships came up from the south by way of India.
“What shall we do to make the Chinese and Koreans think we are somebody?” asked the Chinese Emperor of his wise men.
In the council it was the custom to ask first the younger men to tell what they thought about it, and for the oldest and wisest to speak last. They talked over the matter a long time. Finally one graybeard took off his goggles and made answer. He had on his nose a pair of horn-rimmed green glasses, bigger than those which anyone else wore. These it was supposed enabled him to look farther into the past and the future than his fellows. For the bigger the goggles, the more learned a man was supposed to be. He looked as wise as a stuffed owl, and was very fat. He spoke last, after all the younger counselors had been invited to give their opinions. Behind his back they called him Green Lamps, because of his goggles and their color.
Now in Korea and China it is not polite to keep your spectacles on your nose, when you look into the face of any person to whom you are talking. So pulling off his goggles old Green Lamps got down on his knees. Then he performed the kow-tow. That was done by knocking the matting of the floor with his forehead nine times. Green Lamps nearly broke his stiff bones in doing it, and then he addressed the Emperor, whose title was the Son of Heaven, as follows:
“Sire, the common people will not respect us unless we can show that our far-off ancestors were not born like plain folks, but came down from Heaven. There is an old woman, nearly two cycles or one hundred and seventeen years old, who tells the children about our distant forebears, who dropped out of the sky. Shall I call her in?”
“What is her name?” inquired His Imperial Majesty.
“Mrs. Crinkles, they call her, O Son of Heaven,” answered Green Lamps.
“Summon her before me instantly,” said the Emperor, and he waved his lotus-bud sceptre.
Now Green Lamps was a foxy old fellow. He wanted to get even higher in the Emperor’s favor and had expected this. So, having the old lady ready in another room of the palace, he went out and brought her in. She was all ready to tell her story, with which she had interested the children for a long time. It was the same story which her grandmother had told, when around the fire on winter nights young and old gathered to hear, while the winds howled and the snow covered the land. Once, Mrs. Crinkles was a rosy maid, but now in Peking she was the oldest living person among the Tartars.
The young women called her Mrs. Crinkles because of her face which was so wrinkled and puckered. Once while the old lady was telling her story a mischievous maiden started to count how many wrinkles and puckers, the old lady had in her face, but after reaching seventy-four she stopped, for fear there might be one pucker for every year; and the number 117 for some reason was thought to be unlucky.
In hobbled Mrs. Crinkles. She was already bowed with the weight of years so that when she bowed still lower the court chamberlain, remarking that it beat the kow-tow itself, excused her from making the nine prostrations of her stiff old bones. In fact it was feared that if she got down, she could never get up again. So she was allowed to sit and begin her story.
Her speech was not in the polished Chinese tongue, which for ages since Confucius has been refined by poets and scholars and literary ladies and gentlemen, but was in plain Tartar, or Manchu. Yet the general style of her narrative was very fine. As the old lady told it with animation and fine gestures all eyes sparkled and the Emperor’s visage—they called it the Dragon Countenance—beamed with delight.
This was the narrative:
On the other side of the Ever White Mountains, which divide Korea from Manchuria, is the Land of Lakes. On one of these, as in a mirror, the glorious blue sky and the forms of the snow-covered, majestic mountains are reflected. At night when the stars come out the waveless mirror is spangled with jewels. The fame of this crystal clear flood and the lovely tints which the sunrise and sunset daily made upon it reached even to the skies. There were three lovely virgins who dwelt in the Heavenly palaces and they wanted to come down and bathe in the water of this lake and live on its shores.
Permission was given them by the Lord of Heaven, and descending to the earth they were as happy as fairies could be. They never tired of their enjoyment, seeing their own beautiful faces in the mirror of the lake. When they rose early in the morning, to see the golden sun rise and tint the clouds and waters, it seemed like music when song answered song. When the light breezes rippled the surface of the lake they clapped their hands with delight and at bedtime they were lulled to sleep by the waves lapping on the quiet shore.
They fell in love with the beautiful land and became so charmed with it that in time they forgot about their old home and never wished to go back again into the skies. They were very kind to all living things and especially to the magpies. These feathered creatures were very plentiful and tame, so the maidens made pets of them and chose the magpie as their sacred bird.
Fond of gazing into the blue above and bathing in the liquid blue beneath, the three sisters went often into the lake. Leaving their robes on the pebbly beach, the youngest one always stepped last into the crystal waters. One day they noticed a magpie flying far above them in the air, which seemed to motion as if it had a message to deliver. On coming near they saw that it bore in its bill a blood-red fruit. Descending near where their clothes lay on the beach it poised for a moment, and then dropped the red fruit on the garment of the youngest of the sisters.
Rushing out of the water they sat down to talk over the wonderful incident. Then they agreed that this gift of the bird, which was sacred in their eyes, was a happy omen and meant that something good was to follow, though the magpie, after circling around their heads, flew away. They divided the fruit, which had a most delicious taste, enjoying it also as a message from Heaven.
From this divine token brought by a magpie, the sacred bird, the youngest of the virgins conceived and bore a son. They named the baby boy Golden Family Stem, for they felt sure that he would grow up and become the founder of a dynasty of kings, who should take the name of Great Bright from the shining water near which he was born.
The young mother brought up her boy to believe that he was not like ordinary mortals but was Heaven-born, and therefore should be noble in all his actions. When he grew up he was to be a prince of peace healing the quarrels of men, which should bring happiness and prosperity to them and to all the world.
So in the shadow of the great mountains, which were so high that they seemed to touch the sky and were as the shadows of the eternal world itself, he grew up. Nothing did he love more than to watch the play of light and shade on these mountain sides and in the valleys, as well as in the reflections on the fair face of the lake. These were to him as the smile of the Great Guardian Spirit.
But by and by his dear mother’s breath ceased and she “entered into the icy caves of the dead,” and he found himself an orphan with no one near him; for long since the other two virgins had gone away he knew not where.
Left alone instead of staying among the mountains the boy resolved to take the name of Fancha, or Heaven-born, and to go out into the world and lead men.
He at once set about to build a boat and in this, when finished, he floated down the outlet of the lake into a river. It happened that he landed at a place where three tribes or clans were at war, each one with the other. They were rude enough fellows, accustomed to brawls, and they cared nothing about other common fellows who were like themselves and no better.
But when they saw this noble youth alone and unarmed step fearlessly over the gunwale of the boat and advance to meet them in a friendly way, they were mightily impressed at his noble appearance and his courage in coming among them. When he told them the story of his birth, and that his mother had called him her Heaven-born son, they one and all shouted “Our chief!” and put on him the signs and tokens of lordship over them.
At once the Heaven-born youth became a great leader. At the head of his brave warriors he was always victorious, but he never provoked war. Other tribes flocked to his standard and in time he built a city, and for his wife and queen married a princess in the principal tribe, the daughter of a great chief, and several sons were born in his home.
But wars continued, for the custom of fighting was too old to be given up at once. In one of the battles he and all his sons except one, who was named Fancha, were killed. This one was chased by the enemy for a long distance over the open plains; for they hoped to capture him and make him their prisoner, before he could get into the forest and hide.
But when Fancha reached a dense dark wood a deliverer came to him in the form of the sacred bird, the magpie. This creature settled on his head, and Fancha at once took it to be the token of safety and to have been sent from Heaven.
When his pursuers rushed into the forest and began their glances among the trees looking around for the lad’s hiding place, he stood as still as a post. They seeing the bird supposed the figure was a piece of dried wood or the splinter of a tree struck by lightning, and rushed on and past him. By and by they gave up the hunt: by which time, Fancha had escaped to a place of safety.
“The rest of the story Your Majesty knows,” concluded the old lady, “for Fancha was your ancestor of seventeen generations ago.”
The great Emperor of all the Chinas was intensely interested and deeply moved at the story of the aged woman, and he loaded her with presents and honors, and created for her the office of Chief Story-Teller to the Imperial children. Besides this he made provision for her comfort as long as she lived. With a vermilion pencil he wrote with his own hand the order that when she “ascended to the skies” she should be buried in a gilded sandal-wood coffin, receive a state funeral, have a marble tablet over her grave, and be awarded posthumous honors.
As for old Green Lamps he was raised one degree higher in office, given the honors of wearing a jade button on his cap, and the right to ride in his palanquin nearer the Imperial palace door than any other mandarin, except the prime minister.
Story DNA
Moral
To establish authority and respect, a ruling class may create a noble origin story for themselves.
Plot Summary
The Manchu conquerors of China, once nomadic, seek a noble origin story to legitimize their rule over the more refined Chinese. The Emperor's wise man, Green Lamps, presents Mrs. Crinkles, an ancient storyteller. She recounts how three heavenly virgins bathed in a sacred lake, where the youngest conceived a son, Golden Family Stem (later Fancha), from a magpie-delivered fruit. Fancha becomes a great leader, and his descendant, also named Fancha, is saved from enemies by a magpie, solidifying the divine lineage. The Emperor accepts this tale, rewarding Mrs. Crinkles and Green Lamps, thus establishing a powerful myth for his dynasty.
Themes
Emotional Arc
anxiety to triumph
Writing Style
Narrative Elements
Cultural Context
The story reflects the historical reality of the Manchu conquest of China (founding the Qing Dynasty) and their subsequent need to legitimize their rule over a more ancient and culturally sophisticated population like the Han Chinese. The 'Ever White Mountains' refer to the Changbai Mountains, a sacred place in Manchu mythology.
Plot Beats (12)
- The Manchu people, once nomadic, conquer China and Korea and establish an empire.
- Now rulers, they feel insecure about their humble origins and seek a noble ancestry to command respect from their subjects.
- The Emperor consults his wise men, and the oldest, Green Lamps, suggests a very old woman, Mrs. Crinkles, who tells ancient tales.
- Mrs. Crinkles is summoned and, despite her age, begins to tell a story of Manchu origins.
- She recounts how three heavenly virgins descended to earth to bathe in a sacred lake near the Ever White Mountains.
- A magpie drops a blood-red fruit onto the robe of the youngest virgin, who eats it and conceives a son, Golden Family Stem.
- Golden Family Stem, later called Fancha, grows up believing he is Heaven-born and becomes a wise and victorious leader, uniting warring tribes.
- Fancha founds a city and establishes a dynasty, but eventually, he and all his sons except one are killed in battle.
- The surviving son, also named Fancha, is pursued by enemies into a dense forest.
- A magpie lands on Fancha's head, making him blend in with the trees, and his pursuers mistake him for a piece of wood and pass him by.
- Fancha escapes to safety, and Mrs. Crinkles concludes the story, stating this Fancha was the Emperor's ancestor.
- The Emperor is pleased and rewards Mrs. Crinkles and Green Lamps for providing a divine origin story for his dynasty.
Characters
The Chinese Emperor
A powerful and imposing figure, likely of average height and build for a Manchu noble, though his specific physical traits are not detailed beyond his role. He carries himself with the authority of a ruler.
Attire: Rich and opulent, consisting of satin robes adorned with jewels, and velvet shoes. His attire would be indicative of his high status as the ruler of China, likely featuring imperial colors like yellow and intricate embroidery.
Wants: To establish a noble and divine lineage for the Manchu rulers to gain respect and prevent rebellion from the conquered Chinese and Koreans.
Flaw: Vulnerable to the perception of his people; his authority is dependent on their belief in his divine right to rule.
He begins seeking a fabricated noble lineage and ends by embracing the story provided, solidifying his perceived divine right to rule and rewarding those who helped him.
Concerned with legitimacy, pragmatic, intelligent, appreciative of good counsel, generous.
Green Lamps
An elderly, fat man, described as looking as wise as a stuffed owl. He is physically stiff, particularly in his bones, making the kow-tow difficult.
Attire: Traditional Manchu court attire, likely silk robes appropriate for a high-ranking mandarin, though specific colors or patterns are not mentioned. He wears a cap, on which he later receives a jade button.
Wants: To gain higher favor and status with the Emperor, and to provide a solution to the Emperor's problem of establishing a noble lineage.
Flaw: His ambition can make him manipulative; his physical stiffness due to age.
He successfully provides the solution the Emperor needs, leading to his promotion and increased honors.
Foxy, cunning, wise (or perceived as such), ambitious, respectful of authority.
Mrs. Crinkles
A very old woman, nearly 117 years old, bowed with the weight of years. Her face is extremely wrinkled and puckered, earning her the nickname 'Mrs. Crinkles'. She is physically frail and stiff.
Attire: Simple, traditional Manchu clothing for an elderly woman, likely made of practical fabrics like cotton or linen, perhaps in muted colors. Nothing elaborate, as she was once a 'rosy maid' from the desert before the Manchus became rulers.
Wants: To share the ancient stories of her people, as she has done for generations, and to fulfill the Emperor's request.
Flaw: Extreme physical frailty due to advanced age.
She is brought before the Emperor to tell her story, which she does successfully, leading to her being showered with honors and a comfortable life.
Storyteller, traditional, respected by children, resilient (living to such an old age), humble.
The Youngest Maiden (Fancha's Mother)
Beautiful and ethereal, as she is a celestial being. Her specific human-like features are not detailed, but she is part of a trio of maidens who enjoy bathing in clear waters.
Attire: Celestial robes, which she leaves on the pebbly beach when she bathes. These robes are likely made of fine, flowing, perhaps shimmering fabric, though no specific color or style is given. After conceiving, she would wear more earthly, but still elegant, Manchu-style clothing.
Wants: To enjoy the beautiful earthly realm, to understand the divine message, and to raise her Heaven-born son according to his destiny.
Flaw: Her vulnerability to earthly experiences and the eventual loss of her celestial home.
She descends from the heavens, conceives a son through a divine omen, and raises him to believe in his noble, Heaven-born destiny before her eventual death.
Curious, open to divine signs, nurturing, devoted (to her son), serene.
Fancha (the founder)
Noble in appearance, courageous, and fearless. His specific physical traits are not detailed, but he commands respect through his presence.
Attire: Initially simple, perhaps practical clothing for a boat builder and traveler. Later, as a leader, he would wear more authoritative attire, though not yet the elaborate court robes of the later emperors. Likely sturdy, well-made garments suitable for a warrior-leader, perhaps of wool or leather from his nomadic heritage, but with a noble bearing.
Wants: To fulfill his destiny as a Heaven-born leader, to unite tribes, and to bring peace and prosperity.
Flaw: His initial desire for peace is challenged by the persistent custom of war.
He leaves his mountain home, unites warring tribes, becomes a great leader, builds a city, and founds a dynasty, though he eventually dies in battle.
Noble, courageous, peaceful (initially), victorious, a natural leader, charismatic.
Fancha (the survivor)
A young boy, the only surviving son of the first Fancha. He is agile enough to be chased for a long distance.
Attire: Simple, practical clothing suitable for a young boy in a warrior tribe, likely made of wool or leather, allowing for movement during a chase.
Wants: To escape his pursuers and survive.
Flaw: His youth and vulnerability against adult enemies.
He is chased by enemies, saved by a magpie, and escapes to safety, thus continuing the lineage of the Heaven-born dynasty.
Resourceful, quick-thinking, brave (to escape alone), trusting (of the magpie's sign).
The Magpie
A common magpie, described as a 'feathered creature' and 'sacred bird'. Magpies are typically black and white with iridescent blue-green sheens on their wings and tail.
Attire: Its natural black and white plumage, with iridescent blue-green feathers.
Wants: To deliver divine omens and provide protection, acting as an agent of Heaven.
Flaw: None, as it acts as a divine messenger.
It delivers the divine fruit to Fancha's mother, then later saves the second Fancha, consistently acting as a benevolent force for the Heaven-born line.
Mysterious, divine messenger, protective, symbolic.
Locations
Imperial Palace, Peking
A grand, opulent Chinese imperial palace in Peking, likely featuring vermilion lacquered columns, curved upswept eaves, intricate wooden carvings, and possibly a courtyard. The council room has floor matting for kow-tow prostrations. The atmosphere is formal and steeped in ancient tradition, yet with an underlying tension of the Manchu conquerors trying to legitimize their rule to the Chinese.
Mood: Formal, politically charged, traditional, slightly tense.
The Emperor and his wise men discuss how to legitimize their Manchu ancestry, leading to Mrs. Crinkles recounting the origin myth.
Mountain Lake in Manchuria
A pristine, crystal-clear mountain lake nestled in the shadow of towering, sky-touching mountains. The shore is pebbly, and the surrounding area is lush with vegetation, implying a temperate climate. The water is calm, reflecting the majestic peaks. The atmosphere is serene, idyllic, and sacred.
Mood: Serene, idyllic, magical, sacred, peaceful.
The three virgins bathe here, and the youngest conceives Fancha after a magpie drops a sacred fruit on her garment.
Dense Dark Wood (Forest)
A thick, shadowy forest with dense tree cover, making it dark even during the day. The trees are tall and close-set, creating many hiding places. The ground is likely covered with fallen leaves and undergrowth, making movement difficult and vision obscured.
Mood: Eerie, tense, mysterious, a place of refuge and danger.
Fancha, the descendant, escapes his pursuers by hiding in this forest, aided by a magpie.