"When, with the malevolent
moon, the barbarian Siamese Thais came to the mountains of the Sun, Mun-Ha
was living in the Temple of Lao-Tsun. Mun-Ha, the most precious among
the most precious, for whom the god Song-Hio had woven the beard of
gold. This venerable priest had ever lived in rapt contemplation of
Tsun-Kyankse, the goddess with eyes of sapphire who presided over the
transmutation of souls about to receive their dues, whose searching gaze
none could evade. Mun-Ha had an oracle who dictated his decisions, and
this was his cat Sinh, whom the kittahs fervently revered.
"Seated close to his dread
master, Sinh lived in the contemplation of the goddess. The beautiful
animal His eyes were yellow like gold from the reflection of the
metallic beard of Mun-Ha, yellow like the amber body of the goddess with
the sapphire eyes.
"One night, at the rising of
the moon, the Thais menacingly approached the sacred Temple. Then,
invoking destiny, Mun-Ha died, weighed down by years and anguish. He
died in the presence of his goddess ; close beside him was his divine
cat, and the kittahs lamented their cruel loss. But suddenly, the
miracle of immediate transmutation took place. Sinh bounded on to the
holy Throne. Supported on the head of his stricken master he faced the
goddess. And the hair along his spine blanched to a golden hue. His
eyes, golden of the gold of the beard woven by the god Song-Hio—his
eyes changed to blue—immense, abysmal, sapphire—like to the eyes of
the goddess. His four feet, brown as the earth, his four feet which
contacted the venerable skull, whitened to the claws, to the toe-tips,
thus purified by the touch of the puissant dead.
"Sinh turned towards the South
Door, his imperious gaze, in which could be read an imperative order,
possessed of an invincible force the kittahs obeyed. Then they closed on
the ancestral enemy the bronze doors of the holy Temple, and passing by
their subterranean tunnel they routed the profane invaders. " Sinh
refused all nourishment, and would not quit his Throne. He continued
standing erect and facing the goddess—mysterious priest—fixing his
steadfast gaze on her eyes of sapphire, partaking' of their fire and
sweetness.
"Seven days after the death of
Mun-Ha, erect on his purified feet of white, without lowering an
eyelash, he died. Thus was borne away towards Tsun-Kyankse the soul of
Mun-Ha, which was too perfect for earth. But, for the last time, his
look turned slowly towards the South Door
"Seven days after the death of
Sinh the kittahs assembled before Tsun-Kyankse to choose the successor
of Mun-Ha. Then —Oh wonder !—There came in slow procession the
hundred cats of the Temple. Their feet were gloved in white ; their
snowy hair emitted the reflection of gold, and the topazes of their eyes
had changed to sapphires.
"The kittahs fell prostrate in
an attitude of devout fear, and waited. Did they not know that the souls
of their masters inhabited the harmonious forms of the sacred animals?
And these, solemn and grave, surrounded Legoa—the most youthful of the
priests—and so revealed the will of Heaven. When a sacred cat dies in
the temple of Lao-Tsun, the soul of a kittah re-enters—to quit no
more—the mysterious paradise of Song-Hio, the god of gold. Unhappy are
those who even involuntarily hasten the end of these formidable and
venerable cats : the most dreadful torments are reserved for them, that
the soul in pain may be appeased."