I remember how as children we would eagerly wait for the rain to stop and the fireflies to emerge. We would often cup these fireflies in our hands or place them in transparent glass jars where they glowed with a greenish-yellow hue. Life then was simple and uncomplicated. The joy of standing in the open with outstretched hands waiting for the touch of the first rain drop, the joy of waiting for the fireflies to emerge and shine after a monsoon shower, the sense of childish exhilaration when the rain stopped and the rainbow arched across the sky, were little joys that made our life happy and serene. Such joys are lost to the urbanized generation of today who has probably never seen a firefly. With so much of pollution marring the environment, rainbows have also become a rarity. We took these sights and sounds for granted, not realizing that these sights and sounds would soon become a part of our ‘Once upon a time’ bedtime tales. The firefly is perhaps a metaphor for the destruction of nature at the hands of man. As I watch the flickering lights on the hills side, I am reminded of a line from a poem we often read as children- ‘Jugnoo’ by Harivansh Rai Bachchan -‘Andheri raat mein deepak jalaye kaun baitha hai?’ This is my heartfelt eulogy to the fireflies, the lost sentinels of light.