The Eagle, A Fable
by Lyndon Perry
It was raining in the forest. It had been raining for days, and all the birds
and animals were drenched. The eagle, too, was drenched, and his spirit
dampened as well, for his mate lay with a chill, a victim of the constant rain.
He could not keep her dry, and so looked on with despair as her life slowly
drained away. His tears mingled with the rain when she died.
It was raining in the forest. The eagle could not stand the rain. It brought
back memories too painful for him to bear. He rose up from the trees, hoping in
flight to escape his thoughts. Higher and higher he climbed until finally he
broke through the dark clouds into the dazzling sunlight that shone above the
despair. As the warm sun dried his wings, he suddenly realized that the healing
sun had been there all the time his mate had needed it. The pain of knowledge
learned too late was more than he could bear, and there were tears for the sun
to dry.
Image by Sven Lachmann from Pixabay. |
It was raining in the forest. It had been raining for days, and all the birds and animals were drenched. The rabbit, too, was drenched, and her spirit dampened as well, for her child lay with a chill, a victim of the constant rain. She poured out her sad tale to all who would listen, but the other creatures, too, were victims of the rain, and none could help.
An eagle happened by, and the rabbit began to tell her tale to him. She'd hardly started her story when the eagle suddenly lifted the rabbit's dying child onto his wings and began to circle quickly up into the dark and stormy clouds on an errand he did not take time to explain.
The End
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Keep it clean and positive. (And sorry about the word verification, but the spmb*ts are out in full force!)