Panchatantra Stories: Panchatantra katha, Children Tales, Indian Kids Stories, Bedtime stories, Traditional Indian Tales, short story of kids
The Monkey And The Wedge The Jackal And The Drum The Fall And Rise Of A Merchant The Foolish Sage And The Jackal The Crafty Crane And The Craftier Crab The Cunning Hare and The Witless Lion The Bug and The Poor Flea The Story of The Blue Jackal The Camel, The Jackal And The Crow Tale of The Three Fish The Elephant and The Sparrow The Lion and The Jackal Suchimukha and The Monkey How a Sparrow Came to Grief The Foolish Crane and The Mongoose The King and The Foolish Monkey Paapbuddhi & Dharmabuddhi Kite carried away the child! The Wise Doves The Crow-Rat Discourse The Cunning Mediator The Brahmin & The Crooks The Brahmin & The Cobra The Dove and Hunter The Brahmin, The Monster & The Thief The Wedding of The Mouse

The Crow-Rat Discourse

Once upon a time, A crow seeing good deeds done by rat come to the rat home to seek his friendship,

Crow called from outside and said “I am Laghupatanaka, the crow.”
The rat further retreated into his fort and said, “Go away at once, I don’t know who you are.”
“I have come on an important business. Why don’t you meet me?”
“What do I gain by meeting you?”
“Sir, I thought friendship with you would be useful in such a crisis. I am seeking your hand.”

“Very odd! You are the diner and I am the dinner. How can there be amity between the two? Where there is enmity, there cannot be friendship. Didn’t you hear the elders say:

Friendship or marriage is always
between equals in caste and wealth.
There cannot be any sort of bond
between the weak and the strong.

“He who seeks friendship with someone who is not an equal will earn ridicule. So, please go.”

The crow replied, “Hiranyaka, I am waiting here at your doorstep. If you reject my hand, I will starve here to death.”

“But friendship with you is not possible. However hot the water, it still kills the fire.”
“We haven’t even seen each other. How can there be enmity between both of us?”
Hiranyaka then explained, “Enmity is of two kinds. The first is natural and the second is artificial. The second kind disappears when what caused it disappears. But natural enmity ends only with the death of one of the two enemies.”

“Can you make it clearer, asked Laghupatanaka.

“Yes, artificial enmity is always based on some reason. Natural enmity is like the one between a snake and a mongoose, water and fire, Devatas and Rakshasas, dogs and cats, the rich and the poor, the learned and the illiterate, between women of virtue and vice.”

The crow then pleaded, “Sir, what you say is unreasonable. There is always a reason behind friendship and enmity. That is why a wise man should always seek friendship and not enmity.”

“True, it is foolish to think that you will not come to harm because you are a man of character. People who are blinded by ignorance and anger do not consider your character,” said the rat.

“Friendship with bad men is like a pot of clay easy to break but difficult to rejoin. With good men it is like pot of gold, difficult to break but easy to mend. I pledge that you will have no reason to fear danger from me,” said the crow.

Hiranyaka said, “I have no faith in pledges: don’t trust an enemy with whom you have made peace. Even if the hole is small, water seeping through it can sink a ship. Don’t trust a person untrustworthy”

Faith has its own limits
The evil that trust brings
Leaves you totally destroyed
Him who is highly skeptical
The mighty cannot put an end to
Him who trusts others easily
Even the weakest can kill.

After this long sermon, Laghupatanaka didn’t know how to reply. Hiranyaka, he thought, was a very knowledgeable being and that was a strong reason for him to seek his friendship. Turning to the rat, he said, “Seven words are enough to bring two good people together. We have already talked a lot, which makes us good friends. That’s why please believe what I say. If it is not possible, I will stay out and you can talk to me
from within your stronghold.”

Impressed by his sincerity, Hiranyaka said, “Okay, you should not step inside my fort.”

When Laghupatanaka agreed to that condition, the two became friends and enjoyed their daily meetings and long talks. They helped each other, the crow bringing pieces of meat and relics of offerings to God at temples for the rat and the rat in turn bringing for Hiranyaka grains of paddy and food items. Thus they became great and inseparable friends.

Panchatantra ki kahani, Panchatantra kids stories, Panchatantra for all
Panchatantra Stories: Panchatantra katha, Children Tales, Indian Kids Stories, Bedtime stories, Traditional Indian Tales, short story of kids
The Monkey And The Wedge The Jackal And The Drum The Fall And Rise Of A Merchant The Foolish Sage And The Jackal The Crafty Crane And The Craftier Crab The Cunning Hare and The Witless Lion The Bug and The Poor Flea The Story of The Blue Jackal The Camel, The Jackal And The Crow Tale of The Three Fish The Elephant and The Sparrow The Lion and The Jackal Suchimukha and The Monkey How a Sparrow Came to Grief The Foolish Crane and The Mongoose The King and The Foolish Monkey Paapbuddhi & Dharmabuddhi Kite carried away the child! The Wise Doves The Crow-Rat Discourse The Cunning Mediator The Brahmin & The Crooks The Brahmin & The Cobra The Dove and Hunter The Brahmin, The Monster & The Thief The Wedding of The Mouse

Tale of Three fish

Three fish lived in a pond. Their names were Anagatavidhata, Pratyutpannamati and Yadbhavishya. Some fishermen passing by the pond wondered, “Hey, we have never seen this pond. It seems to be full of fish. It is now evening. Let us come at dawn tomorrow and bag as many fish as we can.”

Hearing the fisherman, Anagatavidhata (the one who foresees a danger in time) called a meeting of all the fish and told them, “Haven't you heard what the fishermen were saying? We must move out of this pond tonight itself. As the wise men have said weak men should flee when a strong man invades or seek refuge in a fort. There is no alternative.”

“The fisherman will come tomorrow. I think we should not be here for even a moment more,” said
Anagatavidhata.

“That's true. I endorse your suggestion,” said Pratyutpannamati. “Let's go elsewhere. Those who are afraid of foreign lands and those who are bound to their soil will die in their own country. He who can prosper anywhere does not die in his own land clinging to sentiment.”

Loudly laughing, Yadbhavishya said, “Your plans are not good. Why should we leave this pond, ancient home of our forefathers, because the fishermen have evil intentions? If it is destined, we cannot escape death even if we go elsewhere. Everything is in the hands of God. You cannot dispose what he proposes. Without his blessings people will die even if they have protection. With his blessings nobody can kill them even if they do not have protection.

Unable to convince him, the other two fish left the pond. Coming the next day, the fishermen took a big catch of fish in the pond. Yadbhavishya was one among them.

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