Simbi was the daughter of a wealthy woman, and she was an only issue of her mother.
She was not working at all, except to eat and after that to bathe and then to wear several kinds of the costliest garments. Although she was a wonderful singer whose beautiful voice could wake deads and she was only the most beautiful girl in the village.
Having eaten the nice food, bathed and dressed in the morning, the next thing that which she was doing was to be singing about in the village.
Simbi was the most merry making girl in the village and in respect of that almost the whole people of her village liked to see her every time. Especially for her singing and amusing sayings, and she was pleased with her mother’s wealths.
Simbi had two friends named Rali and Sala. Both were accompanying her to wherever she was going to sing. They could not be happy without seeing each other in a moment.
One morning, Simbi went to visit these her two friends. But she was greatly terrified when she did not meet both at home, because such a thing had never happened between them before. And she was nearly to faint when she heard the information from the reliable source that Rali and Sala were kidnapped from the path by an unknown man. Then she came back to her mother’s house with grief.
For several days, Simbi was unable to eat, she did not drink water and did not sing as well and did not happy, except to see her two friends.
Of course, a few weeks after, the love of her friends was fading gradually from her heart, and then she started to eat a little food, but she stopped singing entirely.
A few months after that her friends had been kidnapped or had left the village, Simbi became tired of her mother’s wealths and became entirely tired to be in happiness, etc. that which her mother’s wealths were giving to her.
“I am now entirely fed up with my mother’s wealths. I can no longer bear to remain in the happiness, etc., giving me by my mother’s wealths. And merriments are now too much for me than what I can bear longer than this time. But the only things that I prefer most to know and experience their difficulties now are the ‘Poverty’ and the ‘Punishment’.” It was like that Simbi thought within herself, because the had never experienced neither the difficulties of the poverty nor had experienced the difficulties of the punishment since when she was born.