Once upon a time, there were no rivers and lakes on earth, but only
the Eastern Sea, in which lived four dragons: the Long
Dragon, the Yellow Dragon, the Black Dragon and the
Pearl Dragon.
One day the four dragons flew from the sea into the sky.
They soared and dived, playing at hide-and-seek in the
clouds.
"Come over here quickly!" the Pearl Dragon cried out
suddenly.
"What's up?" asked the other three, looking down in the
direction where the Pearl Dragon pointed. On the earth
they saw many people putting out fruits and cakes, and
burning incense sticks. They were praying! A white-haired
woman, kneeling on the ground with a thin boy on her
back, murmured:
"Please send rain quickly, God of Heaven, to give our
children rice to eat.."
For there had been no rain for a long time. The crops
withered, the grass turned yellow and fields cracked
under the scorching sun.
"How poor the people are!" said the Yellow Dragon. "And
they will die if it doesn't rain soon."
The Long Dragon nodded. Then he suggested, "Let's go and
beg the Jade Emperor for rain."
So saying, he leapt into the clouds. The others followed
closely and flew towards the Heavenly Palace.
Being in charge of all the affairs in heaven, on earth
and in the sea, the Jade Emperor was very powerful. He
was not pleased to see the dragons rushing in. "Why do
you come here instead of staying in the sea and behaving
yourselves?"
The Long Dragon stepped forward and said, "The crops on
earth are withering and dying, Your Majesty. I beg you
to send rain down quickly!"
"All right. You go back first, I'll send some rain down
tomorrow." The Jade Emperor pretended to agree while
listening to the songs of the fairies.
"Thanks, Your Majesty!" The four dragons went happily
back.
But ten days passed, and not a drop of rain came down.
The people suffered more, some eating bark, some grass
roots, some forced to eat white clay when they ran out
of bark and grass roots.
Seeing all this, the four dragons felt very sorry, for
they knew the Jade Emperor only cared about pleasure,
and never took the people to heart. They could only rely
on themselves to relieve the people of their miseries.
But how to do it?
Seeing the vast sea, the Long Dragon said that he had an
idea.
"What is it? Out with it, quickly!" the other three
demanded.
"Look, is there not plenty of water in the sea where we
live? We should scoop it up and spray it towards the sky.
The water will be like rain drops and come down to save
the people and their crops."
"Good idea!" The others clapped their hands.
&Quot;But," said the Long Dragon after thinking a bit, "we
will be blamed if the Jade Emperor learns of this."
"I will do anything to save the people," the Yellow
Dragon said resolutely.
"Let's begin. We will never regret it." The Black Dragon
and the Pearl Dragon were not to be outdone.
They flew to the sea, scooped up water in their mouths,
and then flew back into the sky, where they sprayed the
water out over the earth. The four dragons flew back and
forth, making the sky dark all around. Before long the
seawater became rain pouring down from the sky.
"It's raining! It's raining!"
"The crops will be saved!"
The people cried and leaped with joy. On the ground the
wheat stalks raised their heads and the sorghum stalks
straightened up.
The god of the sea discovered these events and reported
to the Jade Emperor.
"How dare the four dragons bring rain without my permission!" The
Jade Emperor was enraged, and ordered the heavenly
generals and their troops to arrest the four dragons.
Being far outnumbered, the four dragons could not defend
themselves, and they were soon arrested and brought back
to the heavenly palace.
"Go and get four mountains to lay upon them so that they
can never escape!" The Jade Emperor ordered the Mountain
God.
The Mountain God used his magic power to make four
mountains fly there, whistling in the wind from afar,
and pressed them down upon the four dragons.
Imprisoned as they were, they never regretted their
actions. Determined to do good for the people forever,
they turned themselves into four rivers, which flowed
past high mountains and deep valleys, crossing the land
from the west to the east and finally emptying into the
sea. And so China's four great rivers were formed -- the
Heilongjian (Black Dragon) in the far north, the Huanghe
(Yellow River) in central China, the Changjiang (Yangtze,
or Long River) farther south, and the Zhujiang (Pearl)
in the very far south.