A very touching love story that is sure
to move anyone who reads it is that of
Pyramus and Thisbe. Theirs was a
selfless love and they made sure that
even in death, they were together. The
tale has its origins in the Roman
Mythology. It is best recounted by Ovid
and the passion of love that blossomed
between the two young lovers enthralls
readers even today.
Pyramus was the most handsome man and
was a childhood friend of Thisbe, the
fairest maiden in Babylonia. Pyramus and
Thisbe were neighbors. They both lived
in neighboring homes and fell in love
with each other as they grew up
together. However, their parents were
dead against them marrying each other.
Their parents were totally against their
union, leaving the young lovers with no
option but burn the light of love
brightly in their hearts and meet
surreptitiously if they can. Over the
years, the lovers could only talk
through a hole in their wall because
their parents refused them to see each
other.
Finally, Pyramus got fed up with his
parents and so did Thisbe. One day while
whispering through a crack in the wall,
they decided to meet the next night
under a mulberry tree near tomb of Ninus.
They decided to elope then.
So, the next night, just before the
crack of dawn, while everyone was
asleep, they decided to slip out of
their homes and meet in the nearby
fields near a mulberry tree. Thisbe
reached there first, covered with a
cloak. As she waited under the tree, she
saw a lioness coming near the spring
close by to quench its thirst. Its jaws
were bloody, from a previous kill that
day. When Thisbe saw this horrifying
sight, she panicked and ran to hide in
some hollow rocks nearby. As she was
running, she dropped her cloak.
The lion, on hearing the shriek, came
near the tree where Thisbe was initially
waiting. The creature picked up the
cloak in its bloody jaws. Then it
tattered the cloak with its
blood-stained mouth, leaves it on the
ground and goes away.
Soon after, Pyramus arrived at the
appointed spot and saw Thisbe's cloak,
his love gift to her, covered in blood
and torn to pieces with the footprints
of the lioness left behind. He
immediately thought that his only love
had been killed by a hungry lion. He is
completely devastated. He thought that
the lion had just hunted down Thisbe and
blamed himself to be the cause of her
death. Had he not been late, could the
lion have killed Thisbe? Shattered, he
prepared to kill himself. Without any
haste, he unsheathed his sword (her love
gift to him), letting the cold, hard
steel pierce his broken heart. He
pierced his chest with his own sword.
Meanwhile, unknown to what just
happened, Thisbe was still hiding in the
rocks due to the fear of the lion. When
she came out from her hiding place after
sometime and came under the mulberry
tree once more, she saw the body of a
man writhing in pain. Thisbe, bringing
courage to her heart, ran towards the
man and was shocked when he found her
only love lying on the ground next to
the blood-covered Mulberry bush with his
own sword impaling his chest.
She gasped in horror as she asked the
still breathing Pyramus what happened.
Barely able to stay awake, he told her
what happened and she cried out in
sorrow. Pyramus died soon after leaving
Thisbe totally shattered.
"What would I do in this world without
my Pyramus?" thought the grief-stricken
Thisbe. She resolves to finish herself
too.
She brought out from Pyramus' chest his
blood-stained sword. Then she said to
the dead Pyramus:
"Wait for me my love. I'm coming to
you."
Then she brought the blade into her own
soft flesh. Thus they died together, in
love and peace.
It is said that this is the reason why
the berries on the Mulberry bush are
red, instead of their original white, in
commemoration of the two young lovers
and their great sacrifice.
The love story of Pyramus and Thisbe
continues to inspire lovers all around
the world. The love between the two
remain one of the purest and truest ever
seen in this world. |