The first time I met someone from Vietnam, and asked her about folktales, she told me the story of the starfruit tree. I have encountered the story in many Vietnamese collections since then - but I have yet to actually eat a starfruit...
The story begins with two brothers and their parents who, when they die, leave all their wealth to their oldest, while the younger boy only inherits a single starfruit tree. The older brother lives in comfort and luxury, but is very greedy and mean, while the younger, as poor young people in folktales usually are, is kind and generous. He lives in a small shack under the starfruit tree.
One day a giant eagle lands on the tree, and asks the young man if he can have some fruit. He agrees, and the eagle eats his fill, then leaves. He comes back the next day, and the day after that, and the young man keeps offering as much fruit as he wishes. Eventually, however, the fruit is almost all gone, and the owner of the tree respectfully asks the eagle to leave enough to take to the market. The eagle, in response, asks the young man to hang a bag from the tree - and spits a bar of gold into it. The young man takes the gold to town, sells it, and buys everything he needs.
The older brother soon finds out about the luck of his sibling. He offers to trade everything he owns for the starfruit tree, in hopes of getting more gold from the eagle. The younger brother agrees to the trade, and moves into the mansion. The older brother sits around, waiting day after day, for the eagle to come back. Eventually it does, and asks for some fruit. The older brother tells the eagle that payment is needed for the fruit, and hangs a bag from the tree. But even so, he doesn't trust the bird, so he climbs the tree, and grabs the eagle's feet to make sure it doesn't escape before (literally) coughing up some gold. The bird takes flight, taking the man along, and when it arrives to the ocean, the older brother falls into the water, never to be seen again.
The young man, now owning the estate (and the starfruit tree) lives happily ever after.
(Read the story here or here.)
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I have never tasted star fruit either, nor jack fruit.
ReplyDeleteI like starfruit very much. It tastes a lot like an apple, but is much juicier (and of course, prettier). Q is for: Question Everything
ReplyDeleteI love this fruit! It's called carambole in French, and it's so sweet!
ReplyDeleteI love the greed-doesn't-pay stories of different cultures. Starfruit always makes me smile - it seems entirely magical and extra delicious because of its shape.
ReplyDeleteThose rich not being satisfied with what they have! I'm glad he got what he deserved (well, maybe not death, but we could believe he landed on an island and had nothing but starfruit to eat).
ReplyDeleteI bought a starfruit once, just to cut it open with my children. We didn't like the taste. We did that with dragon fruit too. Beautiful, but not our type of thing.
Never content with what they have the guys who get the mansions!
ReplyDeleteI always thought eagles were carnivorous, but I guess the starfruit is pretty enough for a meat eater to go vegetarian :)
I have a starfruit tree where I live. Though I do not prefer its taste so much.
ReplyDeleteI did not know that eagles eat starfruit! Nice folktale 😊
Read my S post here SHE
Starfruit doesn't grow in my cold climate (upstate New York) but I've had it off the tree in Florida and - it's OK. I wouldn't go out of my way to eat another one. I know our American eagles are carnivorous but maybe a Vietnamese eagle is a different kind of bird? It was a nice folktale with a happy ending.
ReplyDeleteI've always loved the starfruit, not only because of its lovely shape but also becuase it is so tart and flavourful. Now, after reading your story I like it even more.
ReplyDeleteDelicious but different fruit that I've eaten a few times. Never cheat an eagle or a brother - warning to my younger brother.
ReplyDeleteI’ve had starfruit, very refreshing! Dragonfruit is nice too.
ReplyDeleteThe story sounds like many European ones, except ususlly in those the older brother or sister goes out into the forest in hopes of meeting the friendly fairy and stuffs up the encounter by selfishness.
LOL! True karma in action....loved it.
ReplyDeleteDB McNicol, author
A to Z Microfiction: Sandwich
Great tale! Starfruit tastes, in my opinion, a lot like quince. But my taste-buds might be off...
ReplyDeleteRonel visiting with the A-Z Challenge music and writing: Something Local