Read Fish Tails Online

Authors: Sheri S. Tepper

Fish Tails (106 page)

 

The Story of the Kindly Teacher

Once upon a time there was a very kindly man, a good teacher, who wished to help ­people. Each day he put on his robe, took up his staff, and went among the ­people of the earth telling them his teaching. Each time, when he met a group of ­people, he said, “I have a gift for you, this is a good teaching, which can lead to happier lives. My teaching is this: be kind.”

(If there are children listening, this is where we put our fingers to our lips and nod at them, as though saying “listen.”)

People heeded the good teaching and many lived happier lives. There was only one instruction in the teaching: be kind. There were no sacrifices demanded, no offerings required. There were no rites that were obligatory. It was all very simple. “Be kind,” the teacher would say. Then he would give some examples of kindness—­to ­people, to chickens, to bees, to horses. There is a song he wrote . . .

Be kind to all creatures, wherever they be;

Be kind to the robins who live in your tree;

Be kind to the sparrow, be kind to the finch,

Be kind to the inchworm and give him his inch.

Don't hurry, don't worry, don't grab, and don't clutch;

Don't drive yourself crazy by doing too much.

(These two lines are sung by women)

Be kind to the husband who gives you a pain,

you know he can't stop, there's a flaw in his brain . . .

(These two by men)

Be kind to your wife when she fusses and nags,

Wives who are hugged do not turn into hags.

(Everyone)

Be kind to the gopher, be kind to the mole,

Be kind to all creatures who live in a hole.

Be kind to the cricket who lives on your shelf.

Be kind to your critics. Be kind to yourself!

Many ­people disregarded the Teacher, but they were no worse off than before, so the teaching did not hurt them. Those who listened did have happier lives. The Teacher was old and a little lame, so some of his followers offered to help him, three of them in particular. One was a Drover, one a Lawyer, one a Soldier. These men admired the Teacher and told him they respected his teaching, and always as the Teacher went from one place to another they would hear him say, “I have a gift for you, this is a good teaching.”

One day the Teacher had a sore throat and could not give his teaching, so his friend the Drover said, “I know your teaching, word for word. I can tell it, Teacher.” And he went out among the ­people, saying, “I have something good for you: this is the only true teaching.”

When the Teacher heard what the Drover had said, he told him, “I don't say the
only true
teaching, my friend. I simply tell ­people that it is a good teaching.”

“Oh, but, Teacher,” said the Drover, “that is because you are modest. Everyone knows your teaching is the best one. Besides, ­people will only really pay attention if they think they are getting the very best of anything. Some of them ask me questions. Just today a man asked me, ‘How can I be sure being kind is right?' I told him how I do. So long as the oxen don't wander, I'm kind to 'em. If the oxen wander, I touch them with the whip, to bring them back on the road. I keep a close eye on them. I don't let them wander off to eat grass or drink water when they have hauling to do.”

The Teacher sighed, for that is not the way he taught; he would have been kinder to the oxen, but he was kind to the Drover, and thanked him for his help. And those who listened to the Drover thought the teaching was the only good one, and when they saw the whip he carried, they knew it was for using on ­people who didn't stay on the right path, and they bought whips to show other ­people what teaching they believed in.

It's all right to be kind, but not when there's hauling to do.

Time went by, and one day the Teacher was ill and could not give his teaching. The Lawyer asked if he could be the substitute, and he went out among the ­people saying, “Before I tell you the teaching, I have new rules for you, so before we talk about the teaching, you must learn all these rules about how you must live, for only those who live in this way can really take advantage of the teaching.” And he made the ­people sit down and write copies of the rules as to what they could eat and when they could eat it and how they should dress and who they could associate with and how much money they must contribute to the Lawyer for his time. When the Teacher learned of this, he said, “I always tell ­people my teaching is a gift, not a rule they must follow. And I never talk about money.”

But the Lawyer said, “Oh, Teacher, that is because you think everyone is as kind as you are. If you want to be able to tell your true followers from other ­people, you must make rules that set them apart from other ­people, and you must make them memorize and recite the rules, and you must also make them pay for your words.” And he said, ­“People really value only what they pay for, and you will grow rich in the process.”

The Teacher was upset, but he was kind to the Lawyer. Those who listened to the Lawyer saw he carried books and a bag full of gold, so they learned his rules, and the subrules that went with his rules, and the exceptions to the rules and the details that went with the exceptions, and they bought copies of them all and studied them every day. The Lawyer had taught them it was all right to be kind, but one had to follow the rules first, and
they were so busy learning and following the rules, that's as far as they ever got. They never found time to be kind.

The Teacher grew older. He sometimes found it hard to stand up to give his teaching. The Soldier told him he knew the teaching word for word, so he went out among the ­people. The Soldier told them, “Before I tell you the teaching, line up there and give me your names so I can enroll you among our followers. If you have babies or children, they must be enrolled as soon after birth as possible so God will know who they are. God recognizes only the ones WE enroll. God pays no attention to ­people under any other label. Your children must come to class and learn the teaching. They will listen carefully, repeat every word after me, and they will be tested on how well they remember. You will join your brethren in marching and you will stay in line! Once you have joined, you may not leave us. Anyone trying to leave our rank and file will be hunted down and burned for being a heretic. You may in time do some kindness, but you have to conquer first and get rid of all the ones who don't believe.” Then he marched up and down, he marched up and down, with the sword at his side going
clang . . . clang . . . clang
 . . .

When the Teacher heard of this, he was very upset, but he was kind to the Soldier, even when the Soldier said, “You are too easy with the ­people, Teacher. You need to have a great army of right-­thinking troops, for they will give you the power to put your teachings into law, and that way you can take over the government and enforce your teachings among everyone. The ones who are most rigorous, you will make officers, and they will discipline the ­people. You need more power! I will take these ­people and drill them over and over until they obey without thinking. Then we will conquer everyone else and teach them in their turn!”

And those who followed the Soldier bought swords of their own and became very militant and warlike. They enrolled their children as soon as they were born and told them they must not associate with other ­people who might not know the Soldier's way. They sent their sons to become officers of the troops and their daughters to be teachers in the schools, and they learned to sacrifice and feel pain and offer it to God, and they waged war on those who did not believe what the Soldier believed. It was all right to be kind, but . . .
But you had to conquer first and get rid of the ­people who didn't believe
.

The Kindly Teacher was saddened. He knew he had failed his own teachings when he let his friends teach in his name. He did not want to force his teaching on ­people. He did not want to gain power over others. He did not want to make his teaching into law. He did not want to grow rich. He wanted only to offer a good teaching that would make life happier for many. Now he was too tired and old to go among the ­people and give them his teaching. In sorrow, he died. He was buried by the Drover, the Lawyer, and the Soldier, all of them weeping over his grave. Then each of them went his own way.

And in time the Drover died. The Drover had three friends who knew the teachings, word for word, and they carried on by creating the
Church of the Teacher's Drover
.

And the
True Church of the Teacher's Drover
.

And the
Reformed True Church of the Teacher's Drover.

And they each taught something different, but they all had a whip.

And in time the Lawyer died. The Lawyer had many followers who knew the teachings, word for word, and they carried on by creating the
Church of the Teacher's Lawyer
.

And the
True Church of the Teacher's Lawyer
.

And the
Reformed True Church of the Teacher's Lawyer.

And each of them taught something different, but they all had many, many rules; and very—­large—­bags—­of—­gold.

In time the Soldier died, and he was remembered by the
Church of the Teacher's Soldier.

And the
Militant Church of the Teacher's Soldier
.

And the
True Militant Church of the Teacher's Soldier
.

And the
Reformed True Militant Church of the Teacher's Soldier.

And by the
Absolutely Reformed and Truly Most Militant Church of the Teacher's Soldier
. And they all taught something different, but they all had swords
. Clang, clang, clang . . . Clang, clang, clang . . . Clang, clang, clang.

Every few hundred years, a new person would arise with yet another idea of what the Teacher had probably meant. One time many killed at his direction, and that was called the Teacher's Crusade; another time many tortured in his name, and that was called the Teacher's Inquisition; another time many hated in his name, and that was called the Teacher's Reformation; but no one ever heard what it was the Teacher had taught. Then, of course, men slaughtered men until there were no more men to fight.

There are still those who follow the Teacher in dealing with others—­not his Drover, his Lawyer, or his Soldier. They carry no whip to punish, accumulate no gold to bribe, carry no sword to kill. They do not buy influence to make their belief a law, they do not threaten the pain of hell or prison, they do not deal death. They study no book, memorize no creed. If attacked, they defend themselves, but the way of kindness keeps peace among them. For the Kindly Teacher told them this:

If a man seeks to make his faith a law, this action alone disproves his faith, for the law cannot define kindness.

If a man seeks to buy his faith into prominence, this action alone disproves his faith, for money cannot buy kindness.

If a man seeks to kill others who believe otherwise, this action alone disproves his faith, for those who kill are not kind.

 

About the Author

SHERI S. TEPPER is the author of more than thirty resoundingly acclaimed novels, including
The Waters Rising, The Margarets, The Companions, The Visitor, The Fresco, Singer from the Sea, Six Moon Dance, The Family Tree, Gibbon's Decline and Fall, Shadow's End, A Plague of Angels, Sideshow,
and
Beauty;
numerous novellas; stories; poems; and essays. She lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Discover great authors, exclusive offers, and more at
hc.com
.

 

Also by Sheri S. Tepper

The Waters Rising

The Margarets

The Companions

The Visitor

The Fresco

Singer from the Sea

Six Moon Dance

The Family Tree

Gibbon's Decline and Fall

Shadow's End

A Plague of Angels

Sideshow

Beauty

Raising the Stones

Grass

The Gate to Women's Country

After Long Silence

The Awakeners

 

Credits

Cover design by Adam Johnson

Cover art:
The Blood of Fish
, published in
Ver Sacrum
magazine, 1898 (engraving), Klimt, Gustav (1862-1918)/Private Collection/Bridgeman Images; wave © Biwa Studio/Getty Images; ball © Alex Koloskov Photography/Getty Images; bubbles © Yuji Sakai/Getty Images; continents © Vinko93/Shutterstock

 

Copyright

This book is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents, and dialogue are drawn from the author's imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Harper Voyager and design is a trademark of HCP LLC.

FISH TAILS
. Copyright © 2014 by Sheri S. Tepper. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

FIRST EDITION

Chapter-opener art based on
The Blood of Fish,
published in
Ver Sacrum
magazine, 1898 (engraving), Klimt, Gustav (1862–1918) / Private Collection / Bridgeman Images.

EPUB Edition October 2014 ISBN 9780062304605

Print Edition ISBN 978-­0-­06-­230458-­2

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

Other books

All the Paths of Shadow by Frank Tuttle
Neal Barrett Jr. by Dawn's Uncertain Light
Scabbard's Song by Kim Hunter
A Mother's Trust by Dilly Court
Commencement by Sullivan, J. Courtney
Lucky Catch by Deborah Coonts
Poor Little Rich Girl by Katie Flynn


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024