Along the sea coast in Japan the earthquakes are some times
followed by terrible tidal waves, that do more damage even than the earthquakes.
This wonderful story tells of such a tidal wave.
Long ago there lived in Japan an old man whose name was Hamaguchi. His
farmhouse stood on the edge of a plateau, a flat, open space on the side of
a mountain. Behind, the mountain rose in lofty wooded peaks. In front, it
sloped gently down to the sea. At the foot of the mountain along the shore
was the little village, made up of a hundred or more thatched houses and a
great temple.
One afternoon in late summer Hamaguchi sat on the balcony of his house
and watched the people in the village below. With him was his grandson, a
lad of ten. The rice crop had been very fine, and the villagers were holding
their harvest festival. All the shops were closed, and the streets were
gayly decorated with ropes of straw and paper lanterns. The villagers in
bright-colored clothing were about to join in the harvest dance.
Beyond the village Hamaguchi could see the vast blue sea, wrinkling under
the bright after noon sun. Suddenly there came a slight shock. The house
rocked three or four times and then stood still. Hamaguchi had felt many
earth quakes in his time, and he was not at all frightened until he looked
toward the sea.
The water had become dark green and very rough. The tide had suddenly
changed --- the sea was running swiftly away from the land! The villagers
stopped their dancing, and ran to the shore to watch. None of them knew what
this strange thing meant. But the old man on the mountain had seen one such
sight as a little child. He knew what the sea would do. There was no time to
send a message to the village, nor to ring the big bell in the temple, and
yet the people must be warned.
"Yone!" he called to his little grandson. "Light a torch! Quick!"
The boy was puzzled, but he asked no questions. He kindled the torch at
once. The old man ran to the fields, where hundreds of rice stacks stood
awaiting sale. It was all his wealth. He ran from one stack to another,
applying the torch to each. The dry stalks caught fire quickly, and soon the
red flames were shooting upward, and the smoke was rising in great columns
to join the wind clouds in the sky.
Yone ran after his grandfather, shouting and crying, "Grandfather!
Grandfather! Why? Why are you setting fire to the rice?"
The old man had no time to answer, but ran on, firing stack after stack.
The high wind caught the sparks and loose brands and carried them farther,
until the fields were all ablaze.
The watcher in the temple saw the fire, and set the big bell booming, and
the people turned from the sea to look. In Japan every one in the village
must give help in time of fire. No sooner did the people see that
Hamaguchi's rice stacks were on fire than they began to run. Like a swarm of
ants they climbed the mountain --- young men and boys, women and girls, old
folk, mothers with babies on their backs, even little children joined in the
race to put out the fire.
But when they reached the plateau, it was too late. The flames had
already eaten the stacks of beautiful rice.
"It is too bad," the people exclaimed. "How did it happen?"
"Grandfather did it," cried Yone. "With a torch he set fire to the rice.
He is mad."
In amazement the people stared at Hamaguchi. "You did this thing !" they
cried. "You set fire to the rice fields! "
"Look toward the sea," said the old man, "and know my purpose."
The people turned and looked. Far out they saw a great wall of water
sweeping toward them more swiftly than a bird flies. It was the returning
sea!
The people shrieked, but their voices were lost in a great sound, deeper
than thunder, as the wall of water struck the side of the mountain. The
hills shook, and were drenched in a great burst of foam.
When the cloud of spray had disappeared, the people saw a wild sea raving
over their village. Great angry waves seethed and tumbled above the
house-tops. They rolled away roaring, tearing out houses and trees and great
rocks, and bearing them off. Again the wall of water struck, and again and
again, with less force each time. At last it fell back once more in its
former bed.
The people stood speechless on the side of the mountain. The village was
gone; the temple was gone; the fields had been torn away. Nothing was left
of their homes but a few straw roofs that floated on the water. But every
man and woman and child was safe on the mountain side.
Then the people knew why old Hamaguchi had set fire to the rice. There he
stood among them, as poor as any. And they fell on their knees to thank
him.