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Prayers for Mankind

The following are 4 original shlokas (prayers or hymns) which follow the style of the Panchatantra, ancient animal folktales from India which teach valuable lessons for the betterment of mankind. 

Shlok 4 

The courage to stand up for good is equal 

 to have the courage to stand against evil.”

They came in single filed groups, 

marching along with axes slung

 over their shoulders and a variety 

of other contraptions. The forest

 air was abuzz with trepidation 

and fear. The faint chatter of the

 animals would rise and grow faint,

 the way the tide approaches and 

ebbs from the shore line as they 

debated their next course of action. 

Some shouted to flee from what

 would soon become a disaster 

whilst others insisted that they

 should stand their ground. 

The voices overlapped each other

 like a knotted pile of hemp until 

the roar of their leader cascaded

 over them like a mighty waterfall. 

They were here to stay. They were

 here to protect their forest. They

 were here to stand by their habitat.

 His voice ricocheted around the forest, 

until the axe bearers paused in wonder

 as to what was happening. Slowly,

the animals followed in their leader’s

 footsteps, emerging from their hiding spots. 

Spots. 

Black specs along a leopard’s lithe body. 

Spots. 

Gaps in moth eaten leaves.

 Spots. 

The puddles of water which are left in an elephant’s footsteps. 

An anaconda slithered down from

 a low hanging creeper. Racoons

 emerged from bushes. Bats from

 their cavernous cave dwellings. 

Screeching birds and howling

 Monkeys from the upper tiers 

of several trees. The king’s soldiers

 stood aghast at the wild population

 before them, their hearts encapsulated

 in the vice-like grip of wilderness. 

The lion himself stood ahead of them

 all. His eyes were like two drops of

 molten lava, in the midst of which

 swam pieces of burnished coal. 

They simmered with barely suppressed

 anger which threatened to bubble out

 of the volcano of enragement. His 

eyebrows slanted down so that in 

their calm stature, they seemed even

 more intimidating. It was then that

 the men left, muttering to themselves

 about timber and oak and hemp, of 

fruits and vegetables, of territory to

 build newer, better villages ordered

 by their king. These whispers lay 

forgotten at their leader’s feet, 

killed by the sharp claws of courage. 

Shlok 3 

“The mutual exchange of wise actions and words

can lead to a future which shines with prosperity.”

Her long, slender feathers

swept the very ground she

 walked on. Shades of emerald

 would collide with the rustle 

of leaves on the forest floor. 

Deep shades of cerulean 

and turquoise would form 

luminescent orbs and a 

plumed headdress would lie 

on top of her frame. 

When she moved, the branches 

genuflected in hushed whispers

 of her reverence, and the 

vines which hung from the

 trees parted in acquiescence

 of her elevated grace. 

From these feathers hung the

 inherent knowledge of superiority. 

The owl sat in his oak tree, 

in his little crook in the trunk. 

The owl watched quietly, 

with his deep thoughts with

 little slivers of openings. 

The owl heard everything, 

the rustle and bustle of feathers

 and leaves, the murmuring of 

branches and the swishing of vines. 

There came a day when the 

peacock had been imposing the 

weight of her own beauty, throwing it

 around impetuously and with a 

stubbornness. Stubborn. 

Like a river which does not part.

 Stubborn. Like a tree which

 does not move in the wind.

 Stubborn. Like a bud which

 refuses to bloom. It was then

 that the owl stirred, and the

 oak tree reverberated with

 the force of his words as he 

explained to the peacock that

 her beauty meant nothing if

 she continued to throw it around. 

Decisions are queer things, the owl 

explained, they have the ability to 

shape and destroy lives as quickly

 as an ant scurries across the ground. 

The sky seemed to smile down 

upon the pair as they conversed. 

The wise and the foolish. 

The deep and the shallow. 

When the owl was done speaking,

 she shed a single feather in

 ultimate comprehension. 

The fickle wind picked it up

 on wings of acceptance and

 it travelled 

up, 

Up,

 up 

to lie at the owl’s feet.  

Shlok 2 

“By going out of your way to welcome others, 

you create a home in the core of your heart.”

When he raised his six 

mighty tusks in all their

 glory, their pearly white

 resplendence would shine

 in the glow of the sun’s rays. 

Made from the milk of the 

ocean, they were strong and 

could soak up hundreds of 

litres of water to spin 

big, fluffy clouds. 

These big, fluffy clouds

 would encompass the whole sky. 

His tusks would sing then, and 

their song would carry soar across 

the sky as flawlessly as an 

apsara’s feet movements. 

One day, when the birds 

needed a venue in the sky

 for their annual conference, 

they flocked to him. Their 

frenzied feathers fluttered

 in a chaotic haze around him, 

glimpses of crimson and 

deep chartreuse emerald hues, 

lapis and

flaming magentas. 

When he asked them what was 

so important they had to disturb

his precious summer siesta, they

 explained in voices 

high and low, 

sweet and soft, 

loud and harsh, 

that they had to discuss the 

matter of their new leader.

 Looking at the hope of democracy

 and change shining in their enlarged

 pupils, the elephant stirred. His

 large, slate grey form rose in all

 its glory and he stretched out each

 tusk delicately. The fine, silk 

threads of condensed water 

and air danced an intricate duet

 with each other, forming wisps 

of stringy cotton which gradually

 became firmer. 

Firm. 

Like a string of pearls salvaged from a bottomless ocean.

 Firm. 

Like the back of an ancient turtle. 

Firm. 

Like the first raindrop tear which descends towards the ground. 

The clouds formed spiers and 

orb-like domes which sloped upwards.

 As the rustling of wings surrounded 

him on all four sides, his heart

 felt fuller than it had ever felt before. 

Shlok 1 

“Saving another means saving yourself 

by granting you a true friendship for life.”

She was gliding on the back of the wind, 

her sharp gaze roaming through the

changing scenery. 

Her fine feathers seemed to slice through 

the air in their effortless suave, 

when the sharp cry of a raven 

permeated her eardrums. 

The cry was so sharp, sharp and painful, 

that she found herself slowing, 

slowing as her pace turned sluggish, 

slowing to an extent where she could 

hear the whispering of the trees,

 slowing so the leaves seemed to whistle, 

daunting her on the reins 

of the fickle wind she was riding.

It was then that she swivelled 

her gaze downward.

 In the tangles of a net, 

he lay in a twisted, knotted heap. 

Feathers met with wire in places

where there were several unidentifiable 

gashes, and the blood that escaped

 stained the ground in a visceral 

and despondent red. 

She saw the way the wire stabbed

into the raven’s flesh, and his chest

heaved slowly, 

up and down, 

up and down, 

up and down. 

She swooped downward like an arrow

which had to find its mark.

Her talons were outstretched in her 

signature claw formation and as 

they reached out to dislodge

the ghastly wire contraption 

they got snagged. 

Time stilled, and the pain came in bursts.

 Little bursts as the talons were brutally

 ripped from her own legs by the sheer

underestimated weight. 

Burst. 

The sun rising from the misty hills. 

Burst. 

Lightning piercing across the sky when it rains. 

Burst. 

The taste of fresh worms wriggling in her mouth as she feasts. 

It was then that she saw the raven had 

managed to escape the wire. 

He was injured, but alive. 

He looked at her, a rapid sense of loyalty 

and devotion forming in his burnt amber eyes. 

She knew then that it was forever. 

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