Prem and His Wondrous Melons
By
Valerie L. Egar
Once
upon a time, a very long time ago, a young farmer, Prem, lived at the edge of a
small village. He was a cheerful man, and well liked by the townspeople.
Prem loved the
earth and all its creatures. He talked to seeds as he planted them and sang to
the earth as he walked on it. When he planted grain, he always planted a share
for the birds. He was grateful for the sun and the rain and particularly
thankful for a little patch of earth on a hillside that was perfect for growing
melons.
“Oh,
what a beautiful vine you will grow to be,” he said as he planted each seed. “The
fruit growing on your vine will be sweet and plentiful. I am so happy to help
you grow.”
As
the vines grew, Prem tended them with great care. He loosened the hard soil around them and fertilized
them. When weeks went by without rain, he
hauled barrels of water from the river with his horse cart and watered each
plant. Not one weed slipped past his sharp eye.
As the melons
ripened in the summer sun, Prem took them to the village market and sold them.
They were fragrant and promised to be delicious. He quickly sold them all.
Those who were
fortunate enough to have bought one of Prem’s melons could speak of nothing
else that week. They could not describe the marvelous taste with simple words,
only with comparisons. “Rainbow-flavored,” one person said. “Spiced with the light of the morning star,”
said another.
The following week, Prem found a line of
people waiting for him when he arrived with his wagon of melons. Once again, he
quickly sold them all.
Word of his
incredible melons continued to spread. Soon, the King heard about them. He was
a greedy man and decided if the melons were so delicious, he would have all of
them for himself. He sent a letter to Prem telling him he would buy every melon
Prem had.
Most farmers would
be happy to sell their whole crop so easily, but Prem wasn’t that kind of man.
He thought of the children who would delight at a sweet bite of melon and the
old women who said even a small taste made them remember long ago summers. He
thought of the families carrying one of his ripe melons on a picnic and
anticipating its flavor as it was sliced. If the King bought them all, no one
else would have any. He didn’t want to sell all of the melons to the King.
In the morning,
Prem was tired, but not so tired that he didn’t go to town and spread the word
about what he had done. Each of the townspeople happily paid Prem for the melon
ripening in his field with his or her name. Then, Prem wrote to the King. “Dearest
King,” he said. “I am afraid I do not own any melons to sell you. Each of the people on the attached
list owns one melon. Perhaps you will find someone willing to sell you theirs.”
The
King immediately sent a messenger with a bag of gold to buy whatever melons he
could. A few people sold theirs to the King, which was to be expected, but when
their neighbors talked about the flavor of the melons from that extraordinary
crop for so many years that it became legend, they wondered if they
hadn’t missed something very special.
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Copyright 2017 by Valerie L. Egar, may not be copied or reproduced without permission from the author.
Published May 21, 2017, Journal Tribune Sunday (Biddeford, ME).
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