The Cloud Dream of the Nine 
[Kuunmong] 
A Korean Novel: A story of the times of the Tangs of China about 840 
A.D. 
By Kim Man-Choong [Kim Man-jung] 
[President of the Confucian College] [1617-1682 A.D. according to the 
title page, but 1637-1692 (or 1693) Gregorian calendar by standard 
sources] 
[Written in or after 1689] 
Translated [from Korean (Hangul) to English] 
by [Rev.] James S[carth] Gale 
[Canadian, 1863-1937] thirty years resident in Korea (by 1922) 
With an Introduction by Elspet Keith Robertson Scott and Sixteen 
Illustrations 
Published by Daniel O'Connor, London: 90 Great Russell Street, W.C. 
1, 1922 THE WESTMINSTER PRESS HARROW ROAD LONDON 
W 
[pv] 
Contents 
* INTRODUCTION 1. I The Book ..... ix 
2. II The Translator ..... ix 
3. III The Author ..... xi
4. IV The Tale ..... xiii 
5. V Woman's Voice in Polygamy ..... xxxiii 
6. VI Heaven on Earth ..... xxxvii 
7. VII The Present Translation ..... xxxix 
* THE NOVEL 
1. I The Transmigration of Song-jin ..... 3 
2. II A Glimpse of Chin See ..... 21 
3. III The Meeting with Kay See ..... 39 
4. IV In the Guise of a Priestess ..... 54 
5. V Among the Fairies ..... 73 
6. VI It is Cloudlet ..... 95 
7. VII The Imperial Son-in-law ..... 122 
8. VIII A Hopeless Dilemma ..... 137 
9. IX Among Mermaids and Mermen ..... 155 
10. X Humble Submission ..... 165 
11. XI The Capture of Cheung See ..... 183 
12. XII Yang's Supreme Regret ..... 197 
13. XIII The Awakening ..... 216 
14. XIV In the Fairy Lists ..... 245 
15. XV The Wine Punishment ..... 267
16. XVI The Answer: Back to the Buddha ..... 290 
* APPENDIX .... 301 
[pvii] 
List of Illustrations 
* The Fairies on the Bridge ..... Frontispiece 
* [Title page recto image] 
* [Title page verso image] 
* The Chun-jin Pavilion ..... 40 
* In the Guise of a Priestess ..... 64 
* The Poem by the Way: Among the Fairies ..... 88 
* Cloudlet's Meeting with Wildgoose ..... 98 
* The Stork Dance: The Palace Maids in Waiting ..... 128 
* Chin See's Fear: Cloudlet says Farewell ..... 142 
* The Dragon King Defeated: Among the Mermaids ..... 158 
* Visit to the Monastery: Pictures to Sell ..... 176 
* The Princess Visits Cheung See: Cheung See's Return Visit ..... 190 
* Two in One Palanquin: The Poetry Contest .... 196 
* The Cloudy Dream Land: Cloudlet's Sorrow .... 214 
* The Wedding: Wildgoose and Moonlight .... 220 
* In the Fairy Lists: Swallow and White-cap Enter .... 262
* The Wine Punishment: Green Mountain Castle .... 274 
* Yang looks away from the World: Back to Religion .... 296 
[IMG: The Fairies on the Bridge] 
[pix] 
Introduction 
I.--THE BOOK 
THE reader must lay aside all Western notions of morality if he would 
thoroughly enjoy this book. The scene of the amazing "Cloud Dream of 
the Nine," the most moving romance of polygamy ever written, is laid 
about 849 A.D. in the period of the great Chinese dynasty of the Tangs. 
By its simple directness this hitherto unknown Korean classic makes an 
ineffaceable impression. 
But the story of the devotion of Master Yang to eight women and of 
their devotion to him and to each other is more than a naive tale of the 
relations of men and women under a social code so far removed from 
our own as to be almost incredible. It is a record of emotions, 
aspirations and ideas which enables us to look into the innermost 
chambers of the Chinese soul. "The Cloud Dream of the Nine" is a 
revelation of what the Oriental thinks and feels not only about things of 
the earth but about the hidden things of the Universe. It helps us 
towards a comprehensible knowledge of the Far East. 
II.--THE TRANSLATOR 
But first a word on the medium through which this extraordinary book 
reaches us. 
Travellers, artists, students, archæologists and history writers, 
journalists and literary folk, officials and diplomatic dignitaries who 
wend their way to [px] China by way of Seoul, carry in their wallets 
letters of introduction to Dr. James Gale.*
For more than thirty years Dr. Gale has been clearing and hewing in a 
virgin forest, the literature of Korea. He is the foremost literary 
interpreter to the West of the Korean mind. This is how he regards that 
mind--the words are taken from an address to a group of Japanese 
officials who sought Gale's counsel on a memorable occasion: 
"The Korean lives apart in a world of wonder, something quite unlike 
our modern civilisation, in a beautiful world of the mind. I have studied 
for thirty years to enter sympathetically into this world of the Korean 
mind and I am still an outsider. Yet the more I penetrate this ancient    
    
		
	
	
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