THE VOICE of THE BELL
by William Elliot Griffis · from Korean Fairy Tales
Adapted Version
Long ago, King Tai Jo built a city. He called it Seoul. He loved his new city very much. He wanted his people to be happy. King Tai Jo wanted a special bell. This bell would be for all the people. It would be a big, pretty bell. It would make a loud, clear sound. The bell would help all know the time. It would tell them when to wake up. It would tell them when to eat. It would tell them when to sleep. It would help them live good lives. King Tai Jo wanted the best bell ever.
King Tai Jo sent many helpers far and wide. They went to every town. They went to every farm. They rode fast horses. They rode slow donkeys. They went to many villages. They asked for shiny metals. People were happy to help the King. They gave what they could. They brought much copper. They brought much tin. These were special, strong metals. All wanted to help make the bell. Big carts carried the heavy metals. Many bulls pulled the carts. Soon, much metal was ready. It was for the Great Bell. It was a big pile of metal.
The Great Bell would be very, very tall. It would be very, very wide. It would be big like a house. Two big dragons sat on top. These dragons would help it hang high. The bell would make a sweet, deep sound. Its pretty music would fill the city. All were excited to hear it. They talked about the bell. Workers made a very big hole. This hole was in the ground. They would pour hot metal there. They worked hard every day.
Workers melted the shiny metal. It became very hot liquid. They poured it into the big hole. They waited for it to cool. They waited many hours. But the bell cracked. Oh no! King Tai Jo felt sad. He felt much worry. His heart was heavy. They tried again. Again, the bell cracked. They tried a third time. Still, the bell broke. King Tai Jo was very worried. What was wrong? What was missing? He thought of all the little children. He wished the bell could hold much love. He wished it could hold a loving heart.
King Tai Jo made a special wish. He wished for love for all children. He wished for their joy. He wished for their safety. Then, workers tried one more time. They poured the hot metal. They waited with quiet hope. They waited for a long time. The air was still. This time, the bell was perfect! It was big and shiny. It was very pretty. No cracks were there at all. All cheered loudly. King Tai Jo smiled a happy smile. He was very, very happy. His heart felt light. The Great Bell was ready.
The Great Bell found its special home. It was in the city square. It was hung high for all to see. It stood tall and grand. All looked up at it. They were very proud. People came from far to see it.
King Tai Jo gave the bell a special name. He called it 'The Great Bell'. It would help the city. It would tell people when to work. It would tell them when to rest. It would tell them when to gather. It made the city run smoothly. Life in Seoul felt good.
At last, the bell rang. The first sound filled the air. It made a pretty, clear sound. Dong! Dong! Dong! The sound was strong and deep. Then, a soft, gentle sound came. It was like a baby's happy coo. It sounded like 'Mama, mama.' All heard it. It was a sweet, loving sound. It touched their hearts.
The sound gave a message to all. It said, 'Love your children. Care for your little ones.' It was a happy message. It filled hearts with warmth. The Great Bell sang its song. It sang of love for all children. It still rings today. Its sweet sound fills Seoul. It helps people remember.
Original Story
THE VOICE OF THE BELL
When Tai Jo, the great general and first King of Korea, founded a new dynasty, he moved the capital near the great river Han and resolved to build a mighty city called Han Yang, or the Castle on the Han. It was to have a high wall around it and lofty gates on each side. However, the people commonly called the city Seoul, or Capital. All the roads in the kingdom lead to it.
Happy was he when the workmen, in digging for the foundations of the East Gate, came upon a bell. It was a lucky omen and they carried it at once to the king. He had it suspended over the entrance to his palace and there it still hangs.
But such a bell could only tinkle, while King Tai Jo wanted one that would boom loud and long. He was especially anxious about this, for in Silla, once a rival state, there had hung for centuries one of the biggest bells in the world and Tai Jo wanted one that excelled even that famed striker of the hours. He would have even a larger bell to hang in the central square in the heart of Seoul, that could be heard by every man, woman and child in the city. After that, it must be able to flood miles of hill and valley with its melody. By this sound the people would know when to get up, cook their breakfast, sit down to supper, or go to bed. On special occasions his subjects would know when a king’s procession was passing, or a royal prince or princess was being married. It would sound out a dirge when, His Majesty being dead, all the land must mourn and the people wear white clothes for three years and Korea becomes the land of mourners. The guardian spirit of the city would have its home in the bell.
Word was sent out by messengers who rode on big horses, little ponies, donkeys and bulls to all the provinces, publishing the king’s command to all governors, magistrates and village-heads to collect the copper and tin to make the bronze metal. The bell was to stand ten feet above the ground and be eight feet across; that is, as high and wide as a Korean bedroom. On the top, forming the framework, by which the bell was to be hung, were to be two terrible looking dragons. Weighing so many tons that it would balance five hundred fat men on a seesaw, only heavy beams made of whole tree-trunks could hold it in the belfry, which must be strong enough to stand the shaking when the monster was rung. It had no clapper inside, but without, swung by heavy ropes from pulleys above, was a long log. This, men pulled back and then let fly, striking the boss on the bell’s surface. This awoke the music of the bell, making it toll, boom, rumble, growl, hum, croak, or roll sweet melody, according as the old bellman desired.
So the procession of bullock carts on the roads to Seoul creaked with the ingots of copper. Many a donkey had swallowed gallons of bean soup at the inn stables before he dropped his load of metal in the city, while hundreds of bulls bellowed under their weight of the brushwood and timber piled on their backs to feed the furnaces, which were to melt the alloy for the casting of the mighty bell.
Deep was the pit dug to hold the core and mould, and hundreds of fire-clay pots and ladles were made ready for use when the red-hot stream should be ready to flow. All the boys in Seoul were waiting to watch the fire kindle, the smoke rise, the bellows roar, the metal run, and the foreman give the signal to tap.
When the fire-imp in the volcano heard of what was going on, he was awfully jealous, not thinking ever that common men could handle so much metal, direct properly such roaring flames, and cast so big a bell. He snorted at the idea that King Tai Jo’s men could beat the bells that hung in China’s mighty temples or in Silla’s pagodas.
But when there was not yet enough and the copper collectors were still at their work, one of them came to a certain village and called at a house where lived an old woman carrying a baby boy strapped to her back. She had no coin, cash, metal, or fuel to give, but was quite ready to offer either herself or the baby. In a tone that showed her willingness, she said:
“May I give you this boy?”
The collector paid no attention to her, but passed on, taking nothing from the old woman. When in Seoul, however, he told the story. Thus it came to pass that many heard of the matter and remembered it later.
So when all was ready, the fire-clay crucibles were set on the white-hot coals. The blast roared until the bronze metal turned to liquid. Then, at the word of the master, the hissing, molten stream ran out and filled the mould. Patiently waiting till the metal cooled, alas! they found the bell cracked.
The casting was raised by means of heavy tackle, erected at great expense on the spot, and the bell was broken up into bits by stalwart blacksmiths, wielding heavy hammers. Then a second casting was made, but again, when cool, it was found to be cracked.
Three separate times this happened, until the price of a palace had been paid for work, fuel, and wages, and yet there was no bell. King Tai Jo was in despair. Yet, instead of crying, or pulling his topknot, or berating the artisans, who had done the best they could, he offered a large reward to any one who could point out where the trouble lay, or show what was lacking, and thus secure a perfect casting. Thereupon out stepped a workman from the company, who told the story of the old woman and said that the bell would crack after every cooling unless her proposal was accepted. Anyway, he said, the hag was a sorceress, and if the child were not a real human being no harm could be done.
So the baby boy was sent for and, when the liquid metal had half filled the pit, was thrown into the mass. There was some feeling about “feeding a child to the fire demon,” but when they hoisted the cooled bell up from the mould, lo, the casting was a perfect success and every one apparently forgot about the human life that had entered the bell. Soon with file and chisel, the great work was finished. The hanging ceremonies were very impressive when the bell was put in place on the city’s central square, where the broad streets from the South Gate and those looking to sunrise and sunset met together. Suspended by heavy iron links from the staple on a stout timber frame, the bell’s mouth was exactly a foot above ground. Then, around and over it, was built the belfry. The names of the chief artisans who cast the bell and of the royal officers who superintended the hanging ceremonies were engraved on the metal. It was decided, however, not to strike the bell until it was fully housed and the sounder or suspended log of wood, as thick as the mast of a ship, was made ready to send forth the initial boom.
Meanwhile tens of thousands of people waited to hear the first music of the bell. Every one believed it to be good luck and that they would live the longer for it. The boys and girls could hardly go to bed for listening, and some were afraid they might be asleep when it boomed. The little folks, whose eyes were usually fast shut at sunset, begged hard to stay up that night until they could hear the bell, but some fell asleep, because they could not help it, and their eyes closed before they knew it.
“What shall the name of the bell be, your Majesty?” asked a wise counselor.
All the children clapped their hands.
“Call it In Jung,” said King Tai Jo. “That means ‘Man Decides,’ for every night, at nine o’clock, let every man or boy decide to go to bed. Except magistrates, let not one male person be found in the street on pain of being paddled. From that hour until midnight the women shall have the streets to themselves to walk in.” The royal law was proclaimed by trumpeters and it was ordained also that every morning and evening, at sunrise and sunset, the band of music should play at the opening and shutting of the city gates.
So In Jung, or “Masculine Decision,” is the bell’s name to this day.
But as yet the bell was silent. It had not spoken. When it did sound, the Seoul people discovered that it was the most wonderful bell ever cast. It had a memory and a voice. It could wail, as well as sing. In fact, some to this day declare it can cry; for, whether in childhood, youth, middle or old age, in joy or gladness, the bell expresses their own feelings by its change of note, lively or gay, in warning or congratulation.
At nine o’clock in the first night of the seventh moon—the month of the Star Maiden of the Loom and the Ox-boy with his train of attendants, who stand on opposite sides of the River of Heaven and cross over on the bridge of birds, the great bell of Seoul was to be sounded. All the men were in their rooms ready to undress and go to bed at once, while all the women, fully clothed in their best, were on the door-steps ready, each with her lantern in hand, for their promenade outdoors.
Four strong men seized the rope, pulled back the striking log a whole yard’s distance and then let fly. Back bounded the timber and out gushed a flood of melody that rolled across the city in every direction, and over the hills, filling leagues of space with sweet sound. The children clapped their hands and danced with joy. They knew they would live long, for they had heard the sweet bell’s first music. The old people smiled with joy.
But what was the surprise of the adult folks to hear that the bell could talk. Yes, its sounds actually made a sentence.
“Mu-u-u-ma-ma-ma-la-la-la-la-la-la——” until it ended like a baby’s cry. Yes! There was no mistake about it. This is what it said:
“My mother’s fault. My mother’s fault.”
And to this day the mothers in Seoul, as they clasp their darlings to their bosoms, resolve that it shall be no fault of theirs if these lack love or care. They delight in their little ones more, and lavish on them a tenderer affection because they hear the great bell talk, warning parents to guard what Heaven has committed to their care.
Story DNA
Moral
The story suggests that great achievements sometimes come at a hidden cost, and that a mother's love and care for her children are paramount.
Plot Summary
King Tai Jo, founder of Seoul, desires an enormous bell to symbolize his new capital. After three failed attempts to cast the bell, a workman recalls an old woman's offer to sacrifice her baby. The baby is thrown into the molten metal during the fourth casting, resulting in a perfect bell. Named 'In Jung', the bell is installed, and upon its first ringing, it emits a beautiful sound but also a distinct baby's cry, saying, 'My mother's fault. My mother's fault,' serving as a perpetual reminder to mothers to cherish their children.
Themes
Emotional Arc
ambition to despair to triumph to bittersweet wonder
Writing Style
Narrative Elements
Cultural Context
The story is set during the founding of the Joseon Dynasty by King Taejo (Tai Jo), who moved the capital to Hanyang (Seoul). The 'Emille Bell' or 'Bell of King Seongdeok' from the Silla kingdom is a historical inspiration for the desire for a grand bell, and it is also associated with a legend of child sacrifice.
Plot Beats (12)
- King Tai Jo establishes Seoul as his capital and desires a colossal bell to mark its importance and regulate daily life.
- He sends messengers throughout the kingdom to collect copper and tin for a bell of unprecedented size and sound.
- The description of the bell's intended features, its hanging mechanism, and the process of gathering materials is given.
- An old woman offers her baby as a sacrifice to a metal collector, but the offer is initially ignored.
- The first three attempts to cast the bell fail, with each cooling resulting in a cracked bell, much to the king's despair.
- A workman recounts the old woman's offer, suggesting the bell will not succeed without the sacrifice.
- The baby boy is brought and thrown into the molten metal during the fourth casting.
- The fourth casting is successful, producing a perfect bell, and the human sacrifice is seemingly forgotten by the public.
- The bell is installed in the central square, and elaborate ceremonies are held for its hanging.
- The king names the bell 'In Jung' ('Man Decides'), establishing a curfew for men and a time for women to walk freely.
- On its first ringing, the bell emits a beautiful melody but also a distinct sound resembling a baby's cry, saying, 'My mother's fault. My mother's fault.'
- The bell's voice serves as a perpetual reminder to mothers in Seoul to cherish and care for their children.
Characters
King Tai Jo
A man of regal bearing, likely of average height and a sturdy build, reflecting his past as a general. His features would be consistent with Korean ethnicity of the Joseon Dynasty, with a broad, authoritative face.
Attire: Elaborate silk court robes (gonryongpo) in deep blues or reds, embroidered with golden dragons, worn over an inner layer of white silk. A jade or gold belt (gakdae) would cinch the waist. He would wear black silk shoes.
Wants: To establish a powerful and renowned new dynasty and capital, surpassing previous kingdoms and leaving a lasting legacy.
Flaw: His ambition can lead him to extreme measures, such as accepting the sacrifice of a child for his goal.
He successfully establishes his capital and achieves his goal of casting a magnificent bell, but the story subtly highlights the moral cost of his ambition, leaving the bell's voice as a constant reminder.
Ambitious, determined, persistent, visionary, pragmatic.
The Old Woman
Frail and likely thin from a life of hardship, with a stooped posture from carrying her baby. Her skin would be weathered and wrinkled, consistent with an elderly Korean peasant woman.
Attire: Simple, worn, and patched hanbok (traditional Korean dress) made of coarse, undyed cotton or hemp fabric, likely in muted earth tones. She would wear practical, flat cloth shoes.
Wants: To contribute to the king's project despite her poverty, or perhaps to escape her dire circumstances, even if it means sacrificing her child.
Flaw: Her extreme poverty and desperation, which lead her to offer her child.
Her brief appearance serves as the catalyst for the bell's eventual success, but she disappears from the narrative after her offer.
Desperate, willing to sacrifice, resigned, perhaps superstitious.
The Baby Boy
An infant, small and vulnerable, strapped to his mother's back.
Attire: Simple, soft swaddling clothes, likely made of plain cotton or linen, in light, natural colors.
Wants: None, as an infant.
Flaw: Utterly vulnerable and dependent.
His sacrifice enables the successful casting of the bell, and his 'voice' becomes its enduring sound.
Innocent, helpless.
The Bell (In Jung)
A colossal bronze bell, ten feet high and eight feet across, with a smooth, dark bronze surface. It has two terrible-looking dragons forming the framework at the top for hanging.
Wants: To fulfill its purpose as a timekeeper and communicator for the city, and to express the lingering 'voice' of the sacrificed child.
Flaw: Initially prone to cracking during casting.
From a desired object to a flawed casting, then to a perfectly cast, sentient object that embodies a tragic memory and serves as a moral guide for the city.
Mysterious, resonant, mournful, joyful, warning.
Locations
Han Yang (Seoul) City Center
The central square of the newly founded capital city, Han Yang (Seoul), where broad streets from the South Gate and those looking to sunrise and sunset converge. It is the designated location for the mighty bell, which is to be housed in a strong belfry.
Mood: Anticipatory, bustling with activity during construction, later becoming a focal point of daily life and ceremony.
The final, successful bell is hung here, and its first sound is heard by the entire city, revealing its unique 'voice'.
King Tai Jo's Palace Entrance
The entrance to King Tai Jo's royal palace, where a smaller, tinkling bell found during the East Gate's foundation digging is suspended.
Mood: Royal, formal, initially a place of good omen and minor display.
The initial, smaller bell is hung here as a lucky omen, but it fails to satisfy the king's desire for a grander sound.
Bell Casting Pit and Furnaces
A deep pit dug to hold the core and mould for the colossal bell, surrounded by numerous fire-clay pots and ladles. Large furnaces fueled by brushwood and timber roar, melting copper and tin into bronze alloy.
Mood: Intense, fiery, industrial, with an undercurrent of desperation and urgency due to repeated failures.
Multiple failed castings occur here, leading to the desperate decision to sacrifice the baby boy, after which the perfect bell is finally cast.