Page:The Mythology of All Races Vol 8 (Chinese and Japanese).djvu/433

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
HEROIC STORIES
315

As he was leaving the palace, the Dragon King gave him three gifts; a bale of rice which proved to be, like Fortunatus's purse, inexhaustible, a roll of silk which gave him a never-ending supply of clothing, and a bell which had come first from India and had been hidden at the bottom of the lake for a long time.

Tōda dedicated the bell to a temple on the lake-side and kept the other two treasures himself. In his further adventures he found the miraculous things of the very greatest service, and from his possession of the unfailing rice-bale he was always called by the people, Tawara Tōda, "Lord Tōda of the Rice-bale."[14]