The Golden Bird and the Honest Boy
For KidsQuite a long time ago, in a little town encompassed by green fields and tall mountains, there was an unfortunate kid named Aryan. Aryan was benevolent, focused, and known for his genuineness. In spite of his family’s battles, he generally had faith in making the best choice.
One bright morning, Aryan went to the backwoods to gather kindling. As he wandered further, he heard a delicate, tragic twittering. Following the sound, he found a wonderful brilliant bird caught in a prickly shrub. Its gleaming quills shone like the morning sun, yet its eyes were loaded with tears.
“Relax, little bird. I’ll help you,” Aryan said tenderly. He painstakingly eliminated the thistles, liberating the bird.
When it was free, the brilliant bird spoke, “Thank you, Aryan! You have a good nature. I need to remunerate you. Request anything you wish.”
Astonished to hear the bird speak, Aryan answered, “I needn’t bother with any prize. Helping you was the proper thing to do.”
The bird was dazzled by Aryan’s modesty and said, “Your genuineness merits a gift. Take this brilliant quill. It will give you joy and success.”
Aryan thankfully acknowledged the plume and got back. At the point when his mom saw the brilliant plume, she was flabbergasted. They sold it on the lookout and utilized the cash to purchase food and garments.
Fresh insight about the brilliant bird spread rapidly in the town. A covetous trader named Ramesh caught wind of it and chosen to catch the bird. He went to the woodland with an enclosure, claiming to be caring. At the point when he saw the brilliant bird, he attempted to draw it with grains and sweet words.
Yet, the bird, detecting his eagerness, said, “I reward just those with good natures. Your voracity will bring you nothing.”
Furious and disappointed, Ramesh attempted to powerfully get the bird. The bird fluttered its wings and vanished out of sight, leaving him with only lament.
Aryan and his family, then again, lived joyfully. The kid’s genuineness and thoughtfulness showed everybody in the town a significant example: Genuine bliss comes from accomplishing something beneficial, not from being avaricious.
The lesson of the Story:
Genuineness and graciousness are constantly compensated, while voracity prompts only lament.