NARRATIVE OF THE YOUNG SHEPHERD

Narrative of the Young Shepherd

Narrative of the Young Shepherd

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At the center of the enchanting rolling fields, dwelt a young shepherd. His being was mostly untarnished, simple yet virtuous. His primary duty was to tend to his herd of ewes.

Their low murmuring and the rustling of the gales through the lone tree on the peak were his constant associates. Day upon day, guarding his charges imbued in him a feeling of calm satisfaction.

But, there were occasional moments of solitude, when the shepherd boy would pine for fellowship. On one such day from sheer boredom, the shepherd boy devised a mischievous scheme.

Narratives of wild beasts preying on sheep had been heard times and again in the hamlet. So, the boy chose to used this fear and played a joke on the inhabitants.

One afternoon he ran into the village shouting “Wolf! A wolf is that has taken my sheep!” The terrified villagers ran up the hills for rescue but saw nothing threatening.

The boy laughed at the dilemma on their faces. This trick continued for a couple of more days. Yet, one noon, a real wolf actually charge at the herd. The shepherd boy dashed for aid screaming “Wolf, Wolf!” But this time, no one came.

Frustrated and alone, the boy struggled against the wolf but could rescue only few of his flock. Devastated, he returned to the village only to be met with a scolding on honesty and the results of false alarms.

The tale of this shepherd boy has been handed down generations as a mediaeval parable for teaching the importance of honesty, the implications of dishonesty and the perils of crying wolf. Moreover, click here it stresses how trust once broken, is hard to earn back. It's a story as pertinent today as it was anciently.

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