The curse of the mango

Once upon a time lived two boys โ€“ Ram and Shyam โ€“ who were the best of friends. They had the entire forest as their playground and a sprawling mansion with a white faรงade as their home. Days were spent in teasing out the secrets of the forest, writing songs in praise of a flower, or beast, or the cackling stream and nights were spent under the blanket of the stars, as the cool breeze lulled them to sleep.

The boys grew tall and strong and as time passed, first started to question their idealistic life and then started to resent it. As angels, they had jumped at the chance of coming down to earth, to experience the joys and griefs of living a human life. But the confines of idealism started to chafe and they wondered โ€“ was this all there was to being a human?

One particularly hot morning, as Ram was gathering food, he came across something that paled everything around him. It was a juicy, yellow-coloured something and just looking at it, he knew it would taste sweet.

Now when the boys had been born, they had been given but a few rules. No plucking anything from the forest โ€“ it would give as much as was their need, no fighting and no touching. Ram and Shyam had been good about the rules as they had seemed quite reasonable but seeing that bright, sweet-smellingโ€ฆmangoโ€ฆcame the word to himโ€ฆRam was ready to perhaps break one rule, once.

His hand extended, ready to pluck the mango from its tree when he felt a stone hit his hand. Shocked at the sting โ€“ nothing had ever caused him pain โ€“ he whirled around only to find Shyam who looked thunderous.

โ€œBrother, we were told not to touch.โ€

But Ram paid little heed. He wanted it, he wanted it with a desire he had hitherto never experienced before โ€“ and would never experience again. It was as if the forbidden mango was calling out to him and even though his hand smarted from where Shyam had hit, he reached out, water flooding his mouth in preparation.

Ram threw away the mango as soon as he had taken a bite. It was bitterly sour and not at all what he had expected. So incredulous he was at this betrayal, he didnโ€™t notice what was happening around him.

โ€œWhat have you done, brother?โ€ whispered Shyam as he looked at the gathering clouds. The wind whistled, the trees swayed dramatically and the fallen fruit shrivelled unto itself and turned black.

Their idyllic life, it seemed, was now over.

Note: Because of the way it shattered their life, Shyam cursed the mango fruit, and it is now only available for a few short months in the very hot months.


This is 13 of 26 Myths and Legends. To know more, click here.

11 responses to “The curse of the mango”

  1. vidhya29 Avatar

    This is something interesting! loved it

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Abhijit Ray Avatar
    Abhijit Ray

    why curse the mango? It was minding its own business. It was sour in the first place. If anyone to be cursed, it should be Ram, angel on deputation to earth, who plucked the mango and deprived us earth people benefit of having mango all year wrong.

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    1. You know after writing this myth I did wonder if it was a kindness that something as sweet as a mango is only available to us for a few short months. Doesn’t that make it taste sweeter?

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  3. Very nice portrayal.. Now when ever I will eat mango, I will remember this story.

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    1. I’m flattered. Thanks Chinmayee

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  4. Very nicely waved, liked your interpenetration of having mango for short time.
    There should a “n” before “d” in the second word of fifth para.

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    1. Thanks Jyotirmoy

      Liked by 1 person

  5. That was a nice twist to the Mango season! Good one!

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    1. Thanks! It was a fun post to write.

      Liked by 1 person

  6. Good one. Didn’t know the story

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    1. Thanks Suhasini. This is pure imagination ๐Ÿ˜€

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