An Inspirational Story
(Ms Ritu Sinha)
(Ms Ritu Sinha)
One morning Genghis Khan, the great king and
warrior, rode out into the woods to have a day's sport. Many of his friends
were with him. They rode out gaily, carrying their bows and arrows. Behind them
came the servants with the hounds.
It was a merry hunting party. The woods rang with
their shouts and laughter. They expected to carry much game home in the
evening.
On the king's wrist sat his favorite hawk, for in
those days hawks were trained to hunt. At a word from their masters they would
fly high up into the air, and look around for prey. If they chanced to see a
deer or a rabbit, they would swoop down upon it swift as any arrow. All day
long Genghis Khan and his huntsmen rode through the woods. But they did not
find as much game as they expected.
Toward evening they started for home. The king had
often ridden through the woods, and he knew all the paths. So while the rest of
the party took the nearest way, he went by a longer road through a valley
between two mountains. The day had been warm, and the king was very thirsty.
His pet hawk left his wrist and flew away. It would be sure to find its way
home.
The king rode slowly along. He had once seen a
spring of clear water near this pathway. If he could only find it now! But the
hot days of summer had dried up all the mountain brooks. At last, to his joy,
he saw some water trickling down over the edge of a rock. He knew that there
was a spring farther up. In the wet season, a swift stream of water always
poured down here; but now it came only one drop at a time.
The king leaped from his horse. He took a little
silver cup from his hunting bag. He held it so as to catch the slowly falling
drops. It took a long time to fill the cup; and the king was so thirsty that he
could hardly wait. At last it was nearly full. He put the cup to his lips, and
was about to drink. All at once there was a whirring sound in the air, and the
cup was knocked from his hands. The water was all spilled upon the ground.
The king looked up to see who had done this thing.
It was his pet hawk. The hawk flew back and forth a few times, and then
alighted among the rocks by the spring. The king picked up the cup, and again
held it to catch the trickling drops.
This time he did not wait so long. When the cup was
half full, he lifted it toward his mouth. But before it had touched his lips,
the hawk swooped down again, and knocked it from his hands. And now the king
began to grow angry. He tried again, and for the third time the hawk kept him
from drinking. The king was now very angry indeed.
"How do you dare to act so?" he cried.
"If I had you in my hands, I would wring your neck!" Then he filled
his cup again. But before he tried to drink, he drew his sword. "Now, Sir
Hawk," he said, "that is the last time."
He had hardly spoken before the hawk swooped down
and knocked the cup from his hand. But the king was looking for this. With a
quick sweep of the sword he struck the bird as it passed. The next moment the
poor hawk lay bleeding and dying at its master's feet. "That is what you
get for your pains," said Genghis Khan.
But when he looked for his cup, he found that it
had fallen between two rocks, where he could not reach it. "At any rate, I
will have a drink from that spring," he said to himself. With that he
began to climb the steep bank to the place from which the water trickled. It
was hard work, and the higher he climbed, the thirstier he became.
At last he reached the place. There indeed was a
pool of water; but what was that lying in the pool, and almost filling it? It
was a huge, dead snake of the most poisonous kind. The king stopped. He forgot
his thirst. He thought only of the poor dead bird lying on the ground below
him.
"The hawk saved my life!" he cried,
"and how did I repay him? He was my best friend, and I have killed
him." He clambered down the bank. He took the bird up gently, and laid it
in his hunting bag. Then he mounted his horse and rode swiftly home. He said to
himself, "I have learned a sad lesson today, and that is, never to do
anything in anger."
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