Page:The Fables of Bidpai (Panchatantra).djvu/75

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APPENDIX
lxv

II. Kacchapa Jātaka.

The Talkative Tortoise.

[Fausböll, No. 215, also Five Jatakas, 1871, pp. 16, 41; Rhys-Davids, pp. viii-x; North, infra, pp. 170-175].

Once upon a time, when Brahma-datta was reigning in Benāres, the future Buddha was born in a minister's family; and when he grew up, he became the king's adviser in things temporal and spiritual.

Now this king was very talkative: while he was speaking, others had no opportunity for a word. And the future Buddha, wanting to cure this talkativeness of his, was constantly seeking for some means of doing so.

At that time there was living, in a pond in the Himalaya mountains, a tortoise. Two young haṁsas (i.e., wild ducks) who came to feed there, made friends with him. And one day, when they had become very intimate with him, they said to the tortoise—

"Friend tortoise! the place where we live, at the Golden Cave on Mount Beautiful in the Himālaya country, is a delightful spot. Will you come there with us?"

"But how can I get there?"

"We can take you, if you can only hold your tongue, and will say nothing to anybody."

"Oh! that I can do. Take me with you."

"That's right," said they. And making the tortoise bite hold of a stick, they themselves took the two ends in their teeth, and flew up into the air.

Seeing him thus carried by the haṁsas, some villagers called out, "Two wild ducks are carrying a tortoise along on a stick!" Whereupon the tortoise