anonymous
Once upon a time there was a golden
songbird that lived in a beautiful garden. It spent all its days singing
the loveliest songs to the honour of its maker and the delight of all
the people who heard it.
But the keeper of the garden, who was a foolish and
greedy man, coveted the little songster, and one day he made a cunning
net in which he snared it. The little bird begged the man to release
him and promised to tell him three great secrets if only he would let
him go. Now the gardener really was a very greedy man and rubbing his
hands together, he eagerly released the bird.
Then the songbird told him it’s three great secrets:
Never believe all that you hear;
Never regret what you have never lost, and never throw away that which you have in your keeping.
Never believe all that you hear;
Never regret what you have never lost, and never throw away that which you have in your keeping.
The gardener was furious when he heard this and said
he had known these so-called ‘secrets’ since he was a little
child and shouted that the bird had tricked him. But the songbird quietly
replied that if the man had really known these three secrets, or only
the last of them, he would never have let him go.
Then the bird added:
Then the bird added:
“I have a most precious jewel weighing over three
ounces hidden inside me and whoever possesses that marvellous stone
will have every wish granted.”
On hearing this, the keeper roared like a lion and
cursed himself for setting the songster free. But the little bird only
added fuel to his rage by explaining that since he weighed no more than
half an ounce at most, as anyone with eyes could plainly see, how was
it possible that a gem weighing more than three ounces could be hidden
within it’s tiny body?
At that the man tore his hair and lunged at the bird
in a towering rage, but the little songbird flew to a nearby branch
and added sweetly:
“Since you never had the jewel in your hands you are already regretting what you never lost, and believing what I told you, you threw it away by setting me free.”
“Since you never had the jewel in your hands you are already regretting what you never lost, and believing what I told you, you threw it away by setting me free.”
Then the little songbird told the man to study well
these three great secrets and so become as wise as the bird himself!
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