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Korean folk tales

Chapter 1: PREFACE
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A collection of traditional stories from Korea presents dozens of short narratives that blend the supernatural with everyday life, featuring ghosts, imps, fairies and magical transformations alongside human follies and virtues. Episodes range from hauntings and revenge of animals to encounters with seers, geomancers and temple figures, with recurring themes of moral retribution, filial duty, and religious belief. The volume alternates eerie and comic tones, pairs vivid folk imagination with social satire, and includes brief biographical and explanatory notes that help place each tale within its cultural and philosophical context.

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Title: Korean folk tales

Imps, ghosts and fairies

Author: Pang Im

Yuk Yi

Translator: James Scarth Gale

Release date: January 22, 2016 [eBook #51002]
Most recently updated: October 22, 2024

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net/ for Project
Gutenberg (This file was produced from images generously
made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KOREAN FOLK TALES ***

KOREAN IMPS
GHOSTS AND FAIRIES

KOREAN FOLK TALES

IMPS, GHOSTS AND FAIRIES
London: J. M. DENT & SONS, Ltd.
New York: E. P. DUTTON & CO. 1913

TO
MY LITTLE SON
GEORGE JAMES MORLEY
THE DAYS OF WHOSE YEARS
ARE
TWO EASTERN SPRINGS AND AUTUMNS

PREFACE

To any one who would like to look somewhat into the inner soul of the Oriental, and see the peculiar spiritual existences among which he lives, the following stories will serve as true interpreters, born as they are of the three great religions of the Far East, Taoism, Buddhism and Confucianism.

An old manuscript copy of Im Bang’s stories came into the hands of the translator a year ago, and he gives them now to the Western world that they may serve as introductory essays to the mysteries, and, what many call, absurdities of Asia. Very gruesome indeed, and unlovely, some of them are, but they picture faithfully the conditions under which Im Bang himself, and many past generations of Koreans, have lived.

The thirteen short stories by Yi Ryuk are taken from a reprint of old Korean writings issued last year (1911), by a Japanese publishing company. Three anonymous stories are also added, “The Geomancer,” to show how Mother Earth has given anxiety to her chicks of children; “Im, the Hunter,” to tell of the actualities that exist in the upper air; and “The Man who lost his Legs,” as a sample of Korea’s Sinbad.

The biographical notes that accompany the stories are taken very largely from the Kuk-cho In-mul-chi, “Korea’s Record of Famous Men.”

J. S. Gale.

CONTENTS

PAGE
I CHARAN 1
II THE STORY OF CHANG TO-RYONG 18
III A STORY OF THE FOX 26
IV CHEUNG PUK-CHANG, THE SEER 29
V YUN SE-PYONG, THE WIZARD 36
VI THE WILD-CAT WOMAN 41
VII THE ILL-FATED PRIEST 44
VIII THE VISION OF THE HOLY MAN 47
IX THE VISIT OF THE MAN OF GOD 52
X THE LITERARY MAN OF IMSIL 54
XI THE SOLDIER OF KANG-WHA 58
XII CURSED BY THE SNAKE 60
XIII THE MAN ON THE ROAD 63
XIV THE OLD MAN WHO BECAME A FISH 66
XV THE GEOMANCER 69
XVI THE MAN WHO BECAME A PIG 73
XVII THE OLD WOMAN WHO BECAME A GOBLIN 78
XVIII THE GRATEFUL GHOST 80
XIX THE PLUCKY MAIDEN 83
XX THE RESOURCEFUL WIFE 90
XXI THE BOXED-UP GOVERNOR 92
XXII THE MAN WHO LOST HIS LEGS 100
XXIII TEN THOUSAND DEVILS 104
XXIV THE HOME OF THE FAIRIES 111
XXV THE HONEST WITCH 125
XXVI WHOM THE KING HONORS 130
XXVII THE FORTUNES OF YOO 133
XXVIII AN ENCOUNTER WITH A HOBGOBLIN 141
XXIX THE SNAKE’S REVENGE 146
XXX THE BRAVE MAGISTRATE 150
XXXI THE TEMPLE TO THE GOD OF WAR 153
XXXII A VISIT FROM THE SHADES 157
XXXIII THE FEARLESS CAPTAIN 162
XXXIV THE KING OF YOM-NA (HELL) 165
XXXV HONG’S EXPERIENCES IN HADES 171
XXXVI HAUNTED HOUSES 177
XXXVII IM, THE HUNTER 182
XXXVIII THE MAGIC INVASION OF SEOUL 188
XXXIX THE AWFUL LITTLE GOBLIN 191
XL GOD’S WAY 194
XLI THE OLD MAN IN THE DREAM 196
XLII THE PERFECT PRIEST 198
XLIII THE PROPITIOUS MAGPIE 200
XLIV THE ‘OLD BUDDHA’ 202
XLV A WONDERFUL MEDICINE 204
XLVI FAITHFUL MO 205
XLVII THE RENOWNED MAING 208
XLVIII THE SENSES 210
XLIX WHO DECIDES, GOD OR THE KING? 211
L THREE THINGS MASTERED 213
LI STRANGELY STRICKEN DEAD 215
LII THE MYSTERIOUS HOI TREE 217
LIII TA-HONG 219

BIOGRAPHICAL

Im Bang was born in 1640, the son of a provincial governor. He was very bright as a boy and from earliest years fond of study, becoming a great scholar. He matriculated first in his class in 1660, and graduated in 1663. He was a disciple of Song Si-yol, one of Korea’s first writers. In 1719, when he was in his eightieth year, he became governor of Seoul, and held as well the office of secretary of the Cabinet. In the year 1721 he got into difficulties over the choice of the Heir Apparent, and in 1722, on account of a part he played in a disturbance in the government, he was exiled to North Korea, where he died.

(From Kuk-cho In-mul-chi, “Korea’s Record of Famous Men.”)


Yi Ryuk lived in the reign of King Se-jo, matriculated in 1459, and graduated first in his class in 1564. He was a man of many offices and many distinctions in the way of literary excellence.

“Korea’s Record of Famous Men.”