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Index Jataka Stories: no. 396 - 454

Index Jataka Stories

Summary:

Index Jataka Stories:

no. 396 - 454

translated for Pali into English by

H.T. Francis & R.A. Neil, W.H.D. Rouse

edited by

E. B. Cowell

Alternate format: Download the pdf file from the website (226pages/11MB) Download the pdf file from the website (332pages/10MB)

Jataka 396 - 405

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VII. Sattakanipāto

*

1. Kukkuvaggo

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Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a king was converted by certain parables.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a lion was enticed to his death by the counsel of a jackal.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a king, falling into the power of a man-eating goblin, sent people daily to be eaten: a young man got the better of the goblin and converted him.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a good young vulture was loosed from a snare by a hunter.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How two otters, who had caught a fish, were cheated by a jackal.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a king was cured of a sickness, born of longing for his wife, by seeing a man swallowing a sword.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How an old brahmin was sent away by his wife to beg: a snake got into his meal-bag unperceived: a young brahmin preacher guessed that the snake was there, and then exposed the wife's wickedness.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a brahmin explains to a king why he makes no petition.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a naughty monkey brought ruin on his kindred.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How an angel was converted from heresy.

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Jataka 406 - 416

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  • ==== 2. Gandhāravaggo ====

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Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How two kings became ascetics, and one was admonished in a fault by the other.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a monkey saved his followers at the cost of his own life.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How four kings became ascetics through observing a mango-tree, a bracelet, a flock of birds, and same bulls respectively: a potter and his wife separately follow their example.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a she-elephant, forgotten by the king in her old age, was restored to honour.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How an ascetic was comforted for the loss of a young elephant.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a king became an ascetic on being shewn a grey hair by his chief queen.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a tree-spirit was frightened by a bird and comforted by a roc-king.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a king neglected old friends for new ones: his case illustrated by a story of a brahmin goatherd and some deer.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How an ascetic kept vigil at nights.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a king and queen declared the merits in former births that brought about their birth in royal rank.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a prince understood the speech of jackals: and how a king's son discovered and avenged his father's murder after many years.

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Jataka 417 - 426

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  • ====== VIII. Aṭṭhakanipāto ======

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Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How an old woman, expelled from her son's house owing to her daughter-in-law, thought that Right was dead: and how the whole family became reconciled.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How eight sounds that had frightened a king were explained to him harmlessly.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a man who would have killed his wife was killed by her.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a king would not decide a case till his anger was over.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a willing servant was reborn as a king: how he shared his kingdom for a time with a poor water-carrier who had shown himself an honest fellow: how a barber got from the king the explanation of his birth in the kingly rank, and became a paccekabuddha, honoured by the king.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a king, who told a lie in the golden age, sank into the earth and so down to Hell.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a tempted ascetic was warned by the story of a miserable hunter.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How seven paccekabuddhas came and received gifts from a king.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How an ascetic repulsed a woman who had once behaved harshly to him.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a panther ate a she-goat for all her politeness.

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Jataka 427 - 438

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IX. Navakanipāto

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Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a vulture perished, through attempting too bold a flight.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: Imperfect — with a reference to the story in No. 371.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a grateful parrot refused to leave a barren fig-tree.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: The same story as the preceding one.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: Of an ascetic who would not tell a lie to conceal his sin.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: A boy receives, as a gift from a goblin mother, the power of recognizing footsteps even in the air, and a king, to test the boy's skill, steals his own jewels and then sets the boy to catch the thief. When the boy by a number of pointed stories convicts him of theft, the king is put to death by his own subjects and the boy becomes king.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a king promised his daughter in marriage to an ascetic, if he would offer a living sacrifice, and how the ascetic resisted the temptation.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a crow, through his greediness, could not attain to the beauty of the ruddy goose.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: A youth, who was being led astray by female seductions, is rescued by the sage counsels of his father.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a demon, who swallowed his wife and carried her about in his belly, even so failed to keep her virtuous.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a wise she-goat outwitted the jackal that was plotting to kill her.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a wicked ascetic killed a learned partridge, and how a lion and a tiger avenged the death of the partridge.

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Jataka 439 - 454

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__Catuttho bhāgo__

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X. Dasakanipāto

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Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: About Mittavindaka, and how he was punished for covetousness.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How an ascetic made wise choice of boons offered him by Sakka.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: See Puṇṇaka-jātaka.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a gift to a Pacceka Buddha was plenteously rewarded, and of the magic ship.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How an ascetic was free from all passion, and how he explained to a king the nature of passion.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: Of a number of persons who confessed their secret faults, and of the virtue of an Act of Truth.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a low-born man became king by eating of a cock's flesh, and of the gratitude and ingratitude of friends shown according to their kind.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How an ungrateful son planned to murder his old father, but when his own son overhearing showed him an object-lesson of his own ugliness, he was put to shame.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a father refused to believe that his son was dead, because it was not the custom of his family to die young: this was the result of good living through many generations.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a falcon pretended to make friends with a fowl, but the other was not deceived.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How one who mourned for his son was comforted.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a niggard was cured by holy beings who pretended to choke at his food.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: Of a crow and two ruddy geese, how they discoursed each of his own food, and what was the cause of their colours.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: Ummagga-jātaka.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: Of the vanity of omens, and how goodness and kindness are omens of the best.

Occasion: not avaliable in English. Story: How a girl was kept prisoner in a tower that she might wed no one, and how the attempt was defeated, of the magic city which was guarded by an ass, of the wild deeds of the Ten Slave Brethren, who became kings by right of conquest, and finally perished, and how a king was consoled for the loss of his beloved son.


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en/tipitaka/sut/kn/j/j09/index.txt · Last modified: 2022/03/24 13:21 by Johann