Bamboo
Once upon a time, in the heart of the Western
Kingdom, lay a beautiful garden. And there, in the cool of the day,
the Master of the garden was wont to walk. Of all the denizens of the
garden, the most beautiful and most beloved was gracious and noble
bamboo. Year after year, bamboo grew yet more noble and gracious,
conscious of his Master’s love and watchful delight, but modest and
gentle withal. And often when the wind came to revel in the garden,
Bamboo would cast aside his grave stateliness, to dance and play right
merrily, tossing and swaying and leaping and bowing in joyous abandon,
leading the Great Dance of the garden, Which most delighted the
Master’s heart.

Now, once upon a day, the Master himself drew
near to contemplate his Bamboo with eyes of curious expectancy. And
Bamboo, in a passion of adoration, bowed his great head to the ground
in loving greeting.
The Master spoke: “Bamboo, Bamboo, I would use
you.”

Bamboo flung his head to the sky in utter
delight. The day of days had come, the day for which he had been made,
the day to which he had been growing hour by hour, the day in which he
would find his completion and his destiny.
His voice came low: “Master, I’m ready. Use
me as Thou wilt.”
“Bamboo,” – The Master’s voice was grave
--- “I would have to take you and cut you down!”
A trembling of great horror shook Bamboo…”Cut
…me… down ? Me.. who thou, Master, has made the most beautiful in
all thy Garden…cut me down! Ah, not that. Not that. Use me for the
joy, use me for the glory, oh master, but cut me not down!”
Beloved Bamboo,”—The Master’s voice grew
graver still—“If I cut you not down, I cannot use you.”
The garden grew still. Wind held his breath.
Bamboo slowly bent his proud and glorious head. There was a whisper:
“Master, if thou cannot use me other than to
cut me down.. then do thy will and cut”.
“Bamboo, beloved Bamboo, I would cut your
leaves and branches from you also”.
“Master, spare me. Cut me down and lay my
beauty in the dust; but would thou also have to take from me, my
leaves and branches too?”
“Bamboo, if I cut them not away, I cannot use
you.”
The Sun hid his face. A listening butterfly
glided fearfully away. And Bamboo shivered in terrible expectancy,
whispering low: “Master, cut away”
“Bamboo, Bamboo, I would yet… split you in
two and cut out your heart, for if I cut not so, I cannot use you.”
Then Bamboo bowed to the ground: “Master,
Master… then cut and split.”
So did the Master of the garden took Bamboo…
and cut him down…
and hacked off his branches…
and stripped off his leaves…
and split him in two…
and cut out his heart.
And lifting him gently, carried him to where
there was a spring of fresh sparkling water in the midst of his dry
fields. Then putting one end of the broken Bamboo in the spring and
the other end into the water channel in His field, the Master laid
down gently his beloved Bamboo… And the spring sang welcome, and the
clear sparkling waters raced joyously down the channel of bamboo’s
torn body into the waiting fields. Then the rice was planted, and the
days went by, and the shoots grew and the harvest came.

In that day Bamboo, once so glorious in his
stately beauty, was yet more glorious in his brokenness and humility.
For in his beauty he was life abundant, but in his brokenness he
became a channel of abundant life to his Master’s world.
Author Unknown