He taught school for ten years, and because of his wisdom had many pupils—over two thousand in all. He was now sixty years old and greatly respected by many people.
One day he thought he would give a party for his scholars. So he sent them all word and asked that each one repeat a story at the party.
After he had invited his guests, bethought, "I, too, must have a story ready for to-morrow night. What shall it be?" And he walked down to the river, thinking.
There he saw two creatures in the edge of the river fighting. One was the great bivalve;[1] the other was a snipe that had been hunting for fish in the river.
They fought long and hard, until a hunter with a gun and net passed by and saw them. He made no noise and came close, close, but they were so busy trying to kill each other that they could not see him. So he caught them both and took them home in his net.
Yung-Moi, the wise teacher, thought deeply and said to himself, "There is meaning in all this," and he walked slowly back to his schoolroom.
- ↑ A huge oyster about three feet square and weighing twenty pounds, which is said to have existed at that time (about one thousand years ago), but is now extinct.