The Four Marvelous Brothers
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Once upon a time, there was a childless old
couple who lived near the river bank at the foot of a high mountain. The couple had
been poor ever since they had been married. The couple wished to have children
to help them work and to continue their lineage. Other families near them enjoyed
having children around. Those with children could travel here and there
easily. For this poor old couple, they could not enjoy such pleasure. Even
when they got exhausted, they could not afford to stop working. They had to work to
earn their living.
The poor couple consulted with each other
one day: "We should go to ask for blessings from the devata guarding
the high mountain. Perhaps we may have a meritorious child who is diligent and may
be a great help to us in farming. He can look after us when we get sick or
take care of our properties after we have passed on. Then, we can be like others in
our village."
Thus, the couple prepared flowers, candles,
and incense sticks to go ask for a child as their wish. The two raised
their joined hands in a prayer position and together they spoke: "Sathu, sathu, we
are so poor and suffering. May the great devata bestow a great blessing on
us. May we be granted a child of our own."
On the way home, an unusual incident
occurred. It so frightened them that they both turned pale. When they looked
up in the sky, they saw a giant dragon blowing multicolored rays of fire down onto a bush
right in front of them.
The old couple thought, "There must be
something magical happening there." After the dragon disappeared in the clouds,
they rushed to look at the bush. They saw a golden pumpkin, a silver squash, and
black and white grains, shining like diamonds and jewels. They carefully wrapped
those things in a phakhawma, the all purpose cloth, and returned home.
Once home, the couple did not know where to
properly put those things. "How about putting them in a corner of the
hut?" asked the husband. "Oh, no, they might get soiled," said
the wife. "How about putting them in a jar?" asked the wife.
"Oh, no, they might be too stuffy, " said the husband. Then, the
husband had an idea. "I will weave a bamboo cradle and hang it in the middle of
the room. What do you think, Wife?" The wife agreed, "That's a
good idea. We could put our children in the cradle and rock them back and forth."
The husband then began weaving the cradle. Once it was done, he hung
the cradle in the middle of the room, and said to his wife, "Now we must take
very good care of our children." And so they did; they loved their
"children" as much as their own eyes.
Days and nights went by, the golden pumpkin,
the silver squash, the rice grain, and the sesame seed grew unusually large and heavy.
The old couple could no long lift them. The wife could only rock the cradle
back and forth, taking a very good care of them as if they were their own children.
Ever since they have been in possession of
the four things, the old man became stronger and more diligent. He went to work on
his farm more regularly. Each day the old man would clear the entire mountain
for farming without feeling tired. Each day he would plant his crops without the
least fatigue. Each day, the old man would see more and more of the lush squashes,
pumpkins, sesame seeds, and rice grains. He could not believe his own eyes, and each
day he would say in awe, "Wow, look at all those crops. I
can't possibly do all that by myself! That is the work of a hundred strong
men."
The old man came to tell his wife about what
he saw. Both of them became amazed and puzzled. That night the couple had a
plan. They went to bed earlier than usual so that they could wake up at night to
watch their "children." Late at night, as the couple were hiding and
watching the cradle, they became astounded and speechless. They saw four handsome
young lads hatching out of the golden pumpkin, the silver squash, the rice grain, and the
sesame seed, carrying farming tools in their hands. The four young men then left the
hut. The couple hurried to hide the shells of the golden pumpkin, the silver
squash, the rice grain, and the sesame seed before tracing the four young men's track.
They wondered what they would be doing in the middle of the night. Once they
reached the farm, they saw the four young men digging the earth, making vegetable beds,
and planting something at great speed. It seemed as if they were using magic.
As the dawn was approaching and the roosters
began to crow, the four hurriedly walked home. Once home, they could not find their
shells. They began searching for them, but in vain. Then, they began to
discuss and reason. The old couple came out of hiding and said to them,
"My sons, don't feel upset about this. You can live keeping your human forms
and continue living with us. We love you so much." The four young men
replied, "Dear Father, Dear Mother, if you so love us, please allow us to live in our
shells until the proper time has come. We shall turn into complete human
beings on the full moon night of the twelfth lunar month." The old couple
listened in awe. "On that day, you must prepare a tray of flowers, candles, and
incense sticks to present to the shells to pay homage to them on our behalf. Once we
are out of the shells, we could continue doing the same thing on the same day each year.
Then, the shells will become magic and good for healing all kinds of
sickness." After so saying, the four young lads said goodbye and returned to
live inside their shells again.
On the full moon night of the twelfth lunar
month, the old couple followed the young men's instructions. And the young men
continued living and taking care of the couple happily until they reached the age of
eighteen. Then, the sons begged their mother to carry a golden pumpkin, a silver
squash, some rice, and sesame seeds to offer as gifts to the kings of four cities and ask
for hands in marriage of the daughters of those kings. When the king of each city
glanced at the golden pumpkin, the silver squash, the rice, and the sesame seeds, they
became delighted and were more than happy to grant the old woman's request. The sons
then became royal son-in-laws. Each son inherited the part of the kingdom together
with subjects to be under his care. The golden pumpkin prince became Phya
Muang Lum or king of the lowland whose protectorate covered lands along the Ngiew River.
The silver squash prince became Phya Muang Fa, king of the great high mountains.
The black sesame seed prince became Phya Muang Thoeng, king of the highlands which
are Phu Xuang, Phu Saed, and Phu Daedka. The fourth prince became Phya Sipsong
Hou Muang, king of the twelve areas.
Since the four brothers went to rule the
four cities, the shells of the golden pumpkins, the silver squash, the rice grains, and
sesame seeds became mines of gold, silver, gems, and jewels spreading all over the
lands. Thus, their subjects who were commoners could use those precious things for
their ornaments.
When farming season came, the kings came to
help their people work in the fields and farms. Everyone was helping each other year
in and year out until it became a custom for the people to lend helping hands in farming.
Thus, each city became prosperous with graneries filled with rice, ponds filled
with fish, farms filled with pumpkins, squashes, sesame plants, and rice of all kinds and
colrs, the black rice, the red rice, the brown rice.
As time went by, the four kings led their
people to build their cities to be prosperous with contented subjects. The old
couple alternately went to visit their sons' families and grandchildren. They led
the people in the rite of paying homage to the shells of the pumpkins, squashes, rice, and
sesame seeds after the harvest was done on the full moon day in the twelfth lunar month.
Since then, Lao people from some areas will
hold a merit making ceremony after harvest each year. They believe that by having
such a ceremony, the spirit of their deceased ancestors and relatives will receive the
merit and would be contented and peaceful. The offering units in these ceremonies
often include pumpkins, squashes, sesame seed bags, sticky rice and sesame seeds, sesame
rice chips, rice grains, cooked rice, and popped-rice. When people fall ill, they
would use dried shells of pumpkins, squashes, rice grains, and sesame seeds to mix with
other ingredients to make medicine for healing, as told by the four brothers in the myth. |