Wednesday 14 June 2023

A Folktale from Formosa

 


A story from Formosa (now Taiwan) recorded in the Folk Lore Journal 1887 (Vol 5 p 139) tells how seven brothers, banished from their home, encountered some unsettling ‘little people’ on their journey through the forest. 

 

The exiles went forth into the depth of the forest, and in their wanderings after a new land they crossed a small clearing, in which a little girl, about a span* in height, was seated peeling [sweet] potatoes. ‘Little sister,’ they queried, ‘how come you here? where is your home?’  ‘I am not of homes nor parents,’ she replied. Her surprised questioners then asked if she could direct them to a pathway;  she answered after the following enigmatic manner: ‘If you find your swords girded on the right you are the proper road; if you find them on the left you are going astray.’

            The puzzled brothers shook their heads and again entered the thick forest. After them came the voice of the little girl singing,

            ‘You think that I am fatherless, motherless, small,

            Devoid of that wisdom which parents install;

            Yet was I when fathers and mothers were not,

            And will be when mankind itself is forgot.’

They had not gone far when they saw a little man cutting canes, and farther on to the right a curious-looking house, in front of which sat two diminutive women combing their hair. Things looked so queer that the travellers hesitated about approaching nearer, but eager to find a way out of the forest they determined in their extremity to question the strange people. The two women, when interrogated, turned sharply round, showing eyes of a flashing red; then looking upward, their eyes became dull and white, and they immediately ran into the house, the doors and windows of which at once vanished, the whole taking on the form and appearance of a large, isolated boulder. 

 

* ‘span’: the distance between the thumb and little finger of a outspread hand.


Picture credit:

'Goblins' by Brian Froud: https://www.ferniebrae.com/brian-froud

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