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Written by National Culture Commission
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There was once a
young man who was prodigious in learning. He understood even the language
of the birds. This excited the jealousy of Kabil Maha Phrom, one of
the gods of
a higher heavenly realm. He came down to meet the young man and posed
him three sphinx-like riddles with the wager that if the young man failed
to give the right answers within seven days, he would lose his head
but if he succeeded, the god himself would give his own. Like all folk
tales the young man was at first at his wit's end to answer such difficult
riddles and he repaired to a certain place in order to kill himself
rather than face defeat.
He stopped at the foot of
a tall tree at the top of which was an aerie. By chance he heard the
mother eagle comforting her eaglets who cried for more food, that they
would be gratified soon by feasting on the body of the young man who
would fail to solve the riddles. She then related the story of the wager
between the god and the young man, and in answer to her children's question
the mother eagle satisfied them with the right answers to those three
riddles. The young man availed himself of this information and on the
appointed day he gave the god the three right answers.
The god, as was the case
in such tales, lost the wager and himself cut off his own head. His
head was a terrible one for if it touched the earth there would be a
universal conflagration and if it fell into the sea, the sea would dry
up through its intense heat. The god's head therefore was deposited
in a certain cave in the heavens. Every new year that is on Songkran
Day one of the god's seven daughters in turn will carry her father's
head in procession with millions of other gods and goddesses circumambulating
like the sun round the Meru, the Buddhist Olympian Mount. After that
there are feasts among the celestial beings who enjoyed themselves with
drinks made from the juice of the chamunad creeper. The god's head was
taken back to the cave after the feast, to be taken out again on Songkran
day the next year.
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