One-Man God
by Frank Owen
It is with pleasure that we present a new and hitherto unpublished Chinese fantasy by the author of The Wind That Tramps the World and The Purple Sea. Frank Owen has never been to China but somehow he has mastered the fragile dreamlike atmosphere of that nations legendary to perfection. China has passed through many periods of turbulence, but through it all has clung to the ideal of the ultimate desirability of peace and tranquillity. This is expressed very well in Owens story of the God of the Scented Pine Trees.
A fragrant ink stick, an engraved ink stone and a few brush strokes are all that are needed to tell the story of the God of Scented Pine Trees. Now it must be known that this god revelled in pompous ceremony and was a glorious dignified figure in his silk embroidered robes of sun gold, lush green and purple splendor. He had as many gaudy costumes as there are hours in the round of the year, emblazoned with dragons and unicorns, and exhaling a heady mixture of musk and myrrh and cinnamon, but he was not happy; for alas, only one poor coolie worshipped him. Small wonder then that he was vexed, for gods need worshippers even as men need gods to worship.
The coolie, whose name was Fo Wen, lived in a small mud hut and his most prized possession was a small blackened kettle in which he cooked his rice, and occasionally a bit of turnip to cement together the bones of his emaciated body. But he was unaware that he lacked so much of earth's riches, for each night as he slept on the bare earth his beloved wife returned to him from the realms of her ancestors. Once more they were young and happy because they were together. And so they talked and laughed and were abundantly rich until the moon met the dawn. Ofttimes, Fo Wen wondered whether the dream were the reality or reality the dream even as did Chuang Tzu who dreamed that he was a butterfly who dreamed that he was Chuang Tzu.
Near the hut of Fo Wen stood a stately pine tree. He joyed to sit before
his door of an evening, drinking in the beauty of its graceful fronds against
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