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Ķ¤å¼ÐÃD¡GThe Ugly Stone


I used to feel sorry for that ugly black piece of stone lying like an ox in front of our door; none knew when it was left there and none paid any attention to it¡Aexcept at the time when wheat was harvested and my grandma¡Aseeing the grains of wheat spread all over the ground in the front yard of the house¡Awould grumble:¡§This ugly stone takes so much space. Move it away someday.¡¨

Thus my uncle had wanted to use it for the gable when he was building a house¡Abut he was troubled to find it of very irregular shape¡Awith no edges nor corners¡Anor a flat plane on it. And he wouldn¡¦t bother to break it in half with a chisel because the river bank was nearby¡Awhere he could have easily fetched a much better stone instead. Even when my uncle was busy with the flight of steps leading to the new house he didn¡¦t take a fancy to the ugly stone. one year when a mason came by¡Awe asked him to make us a stone mill with it. As my grandma put it:¡§Why not take this one¡Aso you won¡¦t have to fetch one from afar.¡¨ But the mason took a look and shook his head: He wouldn¡¦t take it for it was of too fine a quality.

It was not like a fine Piece of white marble on which words or flowers could be carved¡Anor like a smooth big bluish stone People used to wash their clothes on. The stone just lay there in silence¡Aenjoying no shading from the Pagoda trees by the yard¡Anor flowers growing around it As a result weeds multiplied and stretched all over it¡Atheir stems and tendrils gradually covered with dark green spots of moss. We children began to dislike the stone too¡Aand would have taken it away if we had been strong enough; all we could do for the present was to leave it alone¡Adespite our disgust or even curses.

The only thing that had interested us in the ugly stone was a little pit on to P of it¡Awhich was filled with water on rainy days. Three days after a rainfall¡Ausually¡Awhen the ground had become dry¡Athere was still water in the pit¡Awhere chickens went to drink And every month when it came to the evening of the 15th of lunar calendar¡Awe would climb onto the stone¡Alooking up at the sky¡Ahoping to see the full moon come out from far away. And Granny would give us a scolding¡Aafraid lest we should fall down¡Xand sure enough¡AI fell down once to have my knee broken. So everybody condemned the stone: an ugly stone¡Aas ugly as it could be.

Then one day an astronomer came to the village. He looked the stone square in the eye the moment he came across it. He didn¡¦t take his leave but decided to stay in our village. Quite a number of people came afterwards¡Asaying the stone was a Piece of aerolite which had fallen down from the sky two or three hundred years ago¤@what a wonder indeed! Pretty soon a truck came and carried it away carefully.

It gave us a great surprise! We had never expected that such a strange and ugly stone should have come from the sky! So it had once mended the sky¡Agiven out its heat and light there¡Aand our ancestors should have looked up at it. It had given them light¡Abrought- them hopes and expectations¡Aand then it had fallen down to the earth¡Ain the mud and among the weeds¡Alying there for hundreds of years!

My grandma said:¡§1 never expected it should be so great! But why can¡¦t People build a wall or pave steps with it?¡¨

¡§It¡¦s too ugly¡A¡¨The astronomer said.

¡§sure¡Ait¡¦s really so ugly.¡¨

¡§But that¡¦s just where its beauty lies!¡¨

The astronomer said¡A¡§its beauty comes from its ugliness.¡¨

¡§Beauty from ugliness?¡¨

¡§Yes. When something becomes the ugliest¡Ait turns out the most beautiful indeed. The stone is not an ordinary Piece of insensate

stone¡Ait shouldn¡¦t be used to build a wall or pave the steps¡Ato carve words or flowers or to wash clothes on. It¡¦s not the material for those

Petty common things¡Aand no wonder it¡¦s ridiculed often by people with petty common views.

My grandma became blushed¡Aand so did I.

I feel shame while 1 feel the greatness of the ugly stone; I have even complained about it having pocketed silently all it had experienced for so many years¡Abut again I am struck by the greatness that lies in its lonely unyielding existence of being misunderstood by people.



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