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The Double-Seventh Festival

2014-07-30 16:14:00

(Chinaculture.org) By Stella

 

One day, the ox was dying. Before it closed its eyes for the last time, it told the young couple to skin him and keep its hide after its death. It also told them that its hide would enable a man to fly even to Heaven. After the old ox died, the young couple reluctantly skinned it and stored it with meticulous care.

Meanwhile, the king and queen of Heaven found out that their granddaughter had gone to the world of man and taken a husband. They flew into a temper. They ordered a god to bring the Girl Weaver back as soon as possible.

Niulang came back from the field one day to find his two children sitting on the ground and crying. He found the seat at the loom empty. The two children told him that an old lady had just taken their mother away. Niulang remembered what the old ox had told him so he put his two children in two baskets on a pole and put on the magic hide. Immediately, he became as light as a cloud and flew up into the sky. He had almost caught up with the queen and his wife when the queen heard the crying of his children. Looking back, she pulled off a gold clasp from her hair and drew a line behind her. A raging torrent immediately appeared in the sky - the so-called River of Heaven. The cowherd and his children could not get past this wide and swollen river. Heartbroken, he and his children could only look on and weep bitterly. Moved by their mournful crying, the king of Heaven decided to allow the separated couple to meet on a bridge of magpies on the seventh night of the seventh lunar month each year.

The poor couple each became a star, the cowherd, Altair, and the Girl Weaver, Vega. The wide river that kept them apart is known as the Milky Way.

This sad love story has passed from generation to generation. It is well known that very few magpies are seen on the Double-Seventh Day. This is because they all fly to the Milky Way to form a bridge for the meeting of the cowherd and the Girl Weaver. And the next day the magpies' heads are bald because the cowherd and the Girl Weaver walked and stood too long on the heads of their loyal feathered friends.

The Double-Seventh Day in China is considered by many to be the Chinese Valentine's Day.

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