SIHACAMMA JATAKA



"Nor lion, nor tiger I see,"--This story, like the last, was about Kokalika, told by the Master in Jetavana. This time he wanted to intone. The Master on hearing of it told the following story.

"Once upon a time, when Brahmadatta was reigning in Benares, the Bodhisattva was born in a farmer's family, and when he grew up he got a livelihood by tillage.

"At the same time there was a Merchant who used to go about hawking goods, which a donkey carried for him. Wherever he went, he used to take his bundle off the ass, and throw a lion skin over him, and then turn him loose in the rice and barley fields. When the watchmen saw this creature, they imagined him to be a lion, and so durst not come near him.

"One day this hawker stopped at a certain village, and while he was getting his own breakfast cooked, he turned the ass loose in a barley field with the lion skin on. The watchmen thought it was a lion, and durst not come near, but fled home and gave the alarm. All the villagers armed themselves, and hurried to the field, shouting and blowing on conchs and beating drums. The ass was frightened out of his wits, and gave a hee-haw! Then the Bodhisattva, seeing that it was a donkey, repeated the first stanza:

"'Nor lion nor tiger I see,
Not even a leopard is he:
But a donkey--the wretched old hack!
With a lion skin over his back!"

"As soon as the villagers learnt that it was only an ass, they cudgeled him till they broke his bones, and then went off with the lion skin. When the Merchant appeared, and found that his ass had come to grief, he repeated the second stanza:--

"'The donkey, if he had been wise,
Might long the green barley have eaten;
A lion skin was his disguise:
But he gave a hee-haw, and got beaten!'

"As he was in the act of uttering these words, the ass expired. The Merchant left him, and went his way."

After this discourse was ended, the Master identified the Birth:--"At that time Kokalika was the ass, and the wise farmer was I myself."