The Lady, or the Tiger? by Frank Stockton
Today's story is “The Lady, or the Tiger?” by Frank R.
Stockton. Here is Barbara Klein with the
story.
Long ago, in the very olden time, there lived a powerful king. Some of his ideas were progressive. But others caused people to suffer.
One of the king’s ideas was a public arena as an agent of
poetic justice. Crime was punished, or
innocence was decided, by the result of chance.
When a person was accused of a crime, his future would be judged in the
public arena.
All the people would gather in this building. The king sat high up on his ceremonial
chair. He gave a sign. A door under him opened. The accused person stepped out into the
arena. Directly opposite the king were
two doors. They were side by side,
exactly alike. The person on trial had
to walk directly to these doors and open one of them. He could open whichever door he pleased.
If the accused man opened one door, out came a hungry tiger,
the fiercest in the land. The tiger
immediately jumped on him and tore him to pieces as punishment for his
guilt. The case of the suspect was thus
decided.
Iron bells rang sadly.
Great cries went up from the paid mourners. And the people, with heads hanging low and
sad hearts, slowly made their way home.
They mourned greatly that one so young and fair, or so old and
respected, should have died this way.
But, if the accused opened the other door, there came forth
from it a woman, chosen especially for the person. To this lady he was immediately married, in
honor of his innocence. It was not a
problem that he might already have a wife and family, or that he might have
chosen to marry another woman. The king
permitted nothing to interfere with his great method of punishment and reward.
Another door opened under the king, and a clergyman,
singers, dancers and musicians joined the man and the lady. The marriage ceremony was quickly
completed. Then the bells made cheerful
noises. The people shouted happily. And the innocent man led the new wife to his
home, following children who threw flowers on their path.
This was the king’s method of carrying out justice. Its fairness appeared perfect. The accused person could not know which door
was hiding the lady. He opened either as
he pleased, without having knowing whether, in the next minute, he was to be
killed or married.
Sometimes the fierce animal came out of one door. Sometimes it came out of the other.
This method was a popular one. When the people gathered together on one of
the great trial days, they never knew whether they would see a bloody killing
or a happy ending. So everyone was
always interested. And the thinking part
of the community would bring no charge of unfairness against this plan. Did not the accused person have the whole
matter in his own hands?
The king had a beautiful daughter who was like him in many
ways. He loved her above all
humanity. The princess secretly loved a
young man who was the best-looking and bravest in the land. But he was a commoner, not part of an
important family.
One day, the king discovered the relationship between his
daughter and the young man. The man was
immediately put in prison. A day was set
for his trial in the king’s public arena.
This, of course, was an especially important event. Never before had a common subject been brave
enough to love the daughter of the king.
The king knew that the young man would be punished, even if
he opened the right door. And the king
would take pleasure in watching the series of events, which would judge whether
or not the man had done wrong in loving the princess.
The day of the trial arrived. From far and near the people gathered in the
arena and outside its walls. The king
and his advisers were in their places, opposite the two doors. All was ready. The sign was given. The door under the king opened and the lover
of the princess entered the arena.
Tall, beautiful and fair, his appearance was met with a sound
of approval and tension. Half the people
had not known so perfect a young man lived among them. No wonder the princess loved him! What a terrible thing for him to be there!
As the young man entered the public arena, he turned to bend
to the king. But he did not at all think
of the great ruler. The young man’s eyes
instead were fixed on the princess, who sat to the right of her father.
From the day it was decided that the sentence of her lover
should be decided in the arena, she had thought of nothing but this event.
The princess had more power, influence and force of
character than anyone who had ever before been interested in such a case. She had done what no other person had
done. She had possessed herself of the
secret of the doors. She knew behind
which door stood the tiger, and behind which waited the lady. Gold, and the power of a woman’s will, had
brought the secret to the princess.
She also knew who the lady was. The lady was one of the loveliest in the
kingdom. Now and then the princess had
seen her looking at and talking to the young man.
The princess hated the woman behind that silent door. She hated her with all the intensity of the
blood passed to her through long lines of cruel ancestors.
Her lover turned to look at the princess. His eye met hers as she sat there, paler and
whiter than anyone in the large ocean of tense faces around her. He saw that she knew behind which door waited
the tiger, and behind which stood the lady.
He had expected her to know it.
The only hope for the young man was based on the success of
the princess in discovering this mystery.
When he looked at her, he saw that she had been successful, as he knew
she would succeed.
Then his quick and tense look asked the question:
“Which?” It was as clear to her as if he
shouted it from where he stood. There
was not time to be lost.
The princess raised her hand, and made a short, quick
movement toward the right. No one but
her lover saw it. Every eye but his was
fixed on the man in the arena.
He turned, and with a firm and quick step he walked across
the empty space. Every heart stopped
beating. Every breath was held. Every eye was fixed upon that man. He went to the door on the right and opened
it.
Now, the point of the story is this: Did the tiger come out
of that door, or did the lady?
The more we think about this question, the harder it is to
answer. It involves a study of the human
heart. Think of it not as if the
decision of the question depended upon yourself. But as if it depended upon that hot-blooded
princess, her soul at a white heat under the fires of sadness and
jealousy. She had lost him, but who
should have him?
How often, in her waking hours and in her dreams, had she
started in wild terror, and covered her face with her hands? She thought of her lover opening the door on
the other side of which waited the sharp teeth of the tiger!
But how much oftener had she seen him open the other
door? How had she ground her teeth, and
torn her hair, when she had seen his happy face as he opened the door of the
lady! How her soul had burned in pain
when she had seen him run to meet that woman, with her look of victory. When she had seen the two of them get
married. And when she had seen them walk
away together upon their path of flowers, followed by the happy shouts of the
crowd, in which her one sad cry was lost!
Would it not be better for him to die quickly, and go to
wait for her in that blessed place of the future? And yet, that tiger, those cries, that blood!
Her decision had been shown quickly. But it had been made after days and nights of
thought. She had known she would be
asked. And she had decided what she
would answer. And she had moved her hand
to the right.
The question of her decision is one not to be lightly
considered. And it is not for me to set
myself up as the one person able to answer it.
And so I leave it with all of you:
Which came out of the open door – the lady, or the tiger?
The story was written by Frank Stockton in 1882. It was
adapted for VOA Learning English by Shelley Gollust. The storyteller was
Barbara Klein.
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Words in This Story
poetic justice – n. a result or occurrence that seems proper
because someone who has done bad things to other people is being harmed or
punished
innocence – adj. the state of being not guilty of a crime or
other wrong act
mourn – v. to feel or show great sadness because someone has
died
ancestor – n. a person who was in someone's family in past
times; one of the people from whom a person is descended
tense – adj. nervous and not able to relax
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