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The Legend of the Victoria Regia

By Odeen Ishmael

Guyana Journal, October 2009

 

Long, long ago, there was a little forest village on the bank of a wide river in southern Guyana. All of the inhabitants were very happy as they always had good crops from their gardens, and animals they hunted for meat were abundant in the forests on both sides of the river.

In this forest village lived twelve teenage girls who always gathered in the evenings under a tall mora tree on the riverside to sing the songs that their mothers had taught them. After their singing, as the moon rose and the stars twinkled in the dark sky, the girls would stare in awe at these beautiful heavenly bodies.

They were particularly interested in these attractive objects since there was a general belief in those days of long ago time that anyone who touched a beautiful ob-ject would acquire some of its beauty.

“The moon and the stars are so lovely,” said Neca, one of the girls in the group. “I wish we could touch them so we can acquire some of their beauty, but they are so far away.”

“We must find a way to touch them,” replied an-other girl in the group. “Maybe, we should climb to the top of the mountain, and from there we will be able to touch them.”

So every evening after their singing session, they stared at the moon and the stars and contemplated various ways they could attempt to touch them.

Of all the girls, Neca was more interested in touch-ing the Moon, and in the evening she spent long hours just staring at it as it moved slowly across the night sky.

“I know what I will do,” she declared to her friends one evening. “I will climb to the top of this tall mora tree and try to touch the moon.”

“Well, you may climb to the top of the tree, but I think we can touch the moon and the stars if we go to the top of the mountain,” one of her friends explained. This view seemed to be more popular, and all except Neca decided that they would do exactly that.

So one night when the full moon was rising in the sky, Neca climbed to the top of the mora tree and stretched out her hands towards the shining orb. But, clearly, the moon was too far away for her to accom-plish this feat. In great disappointment, she descended and tearfully went home to sleep.

Meanwhile, that same night her friends walked through the forest to the high mountain some distance away from the village. After reaching the peak, they stretched out their hands towards the moon and the stars, but they, too, failed to attain their objective. With long, sad faces, they wearily walked back home realising that they could never acquire the beauty of those distant objects.

But Neca never gave up. The following night, when her friends had all gone to sleep, she walked on the river bank and stared at the big golden moon as it rose above the trees. Then she looked into the calm water of the river and saw the moon's reflection.

“Now, this is how I can touch the moon,” she rea-soned. And with that, she plunged into the river and reached out towards the reflection. But she soon dis-appeared beneath the deep still water and was never seen again.

But the moon goddess did see Neca as she made her fateful plunge.

“I feel so sorry for her,” she sighed. “Neca always wanted to become more beautiful, so I'll make sure that people will see that beauty for all times.”

So the moon goddess brought Neca's body from the depths of the river and changed her into a large majes-tic pink water lily which she left to grow in the water on river's edge. From that day, people everywhere be-came fascinated with this most gorgeous flower.

Today, that stately and attractive water lily is known as the Victoria Regia.



Copyright © 2009, by Odeen Ishmael
From: Collected Legends of Guyana by Odeen Ishmael
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