Indian Fairy Tales 14
A lac of rupees for a piece of advice
A poor blind Brahman and his wife were
dependent on their son for their subsistence. Every day the young
fellow used to go out and get what he could by begging. This continued
for some time, till at last he became quite tired of such a wretched
life, and determined to go and try his luck in another country. He
informed his wife of his intention, and ordered her to manage somehow
or other for the old people during the few months that he would be
absent. He begged her to be industrious, lest his parents should be
angry and curse him.
One morning he started with some food in a
bundle, and walked on day after day, till he reached the chief city of
the neighbouring country. Here he went and sat down by a merchant's
shop and asked alms. The merchant inquired whence he had come, why he
had come, and what was his caste; to which he replied that he was a
Brahman, and was wandering hither and thither begging a livelihood for
himself and wife and parents. Moved with pity for the man, the merchant
advised him to visit the kind and generous king of that country, and
offered to accompany him to the court. Now at that time it happened
that the king was seeking for a Brahman to look after a golden temple
which he had just had built. His Majesty was very glad, therefore, when
he saw the Brahman and heard that he was good and honest. He at once
deputed him to the charge of this temple, and ordered fifty kharwars of
rice and one hundred rupees to be paid to him every year as wages.
Two months after this, the Brahman's wife, not
having heard any news of her husband, left the house and went in quest
of him. By a happy fate she arrived at the very place that he had
reached, where she heard that every morning at the golden temple a
golden rupee was given in the king's name to any beggar who chose to go
for it. Accordingly, on the following morning she went to the place
and met her husband.
"Why have you come here?" he asked. "Why have
you left my parents? Care you not whether they curse me and I die? Go
back immediately, and await my return."
"No, no," said the woman. "I cannot go back to
starve and see your old father and mother die. There is not a grain of
rice left in the house."
"O Bhagawant!" exclaimed the Brahman. "Here,
take this," he continued, scribbling a few lines on some paper, and
then handing it to her, "and give it to the king. You will see that he
will give you a lac of rupees for it." Thus saying he dismissed her,
and the woman left.
On this scrap of paper were written three
pieces of advice—First, If a person is travelling and reaches any
strange place at night, let him be careful where he puts up, and not
close his eyes in sleep, lest he close them in death. Secondly, If a
man has a married sister, and visits her in great pomp, she will
receive him for the sake of what she can obtain from him; but if he
comes to her in poverty, she will frown on him and disown him. Thirdly,
If a man has to do any work, he must do it himself, and do it with
might and without fear.
On reaching her home the Brahmani told her
parents of her meeting with her husband, and what a valuable piece of
paper he had given her; but not liking to go before the king herself,
she sent one of her relations. The king read the paper, and ordering
the man to be flogged, dismissed him. The next morning the Brahmani
took the paper, and while she was going along the road to the darbar
reading it, the king's son met her, and asked what she was reading,
whereupon she replied that she held in her hands a paper containing
certain bits of advice, for which she wanted a lac of rupees. The
prince asked her to show it to him, and when he had read it gave her a
parwana for the amount, and rode on. The poor Brahmani was very
thankful. That day she laid in a great store of provisions, sufficient
to last them all for a long time.
In the evening the prince related to his
father the meeting with the woman, and the purchase of the piece of
paper. He thought his father would applaud the act. But it was not so.
The king was more angry than before, and banished his son from the
country.
So the prince bade adieu to his mother and
relations and friends, and rode off on his horse, whither he did not
know. At nightfall he arrived at some place, where a man met him, and
invited him to lodge at his house. The prince accepted the invitation,
and was treated like a prince. Matting was spread for him to squat on,
and the best provisions set before him.
"Ah!" thought he, as he lay down to rest,
"here is a case for the first piece of advice that the Brahmani gave
me. I will not sleep to-night."
It was well that he thus resolved, for in the
middle of the night the man rose up, and taking a sword in his hand,
rushed to the prince with the intention of killing him. But he rose up
and spoke.
"Do not slay me," he said. "What profit would
you get from my death? If you killed me you would be sorry afterwards,
like that man who killed his dog."
"What man? What dog?" he asked.
"I will tell you," said the prince, "if you will give me that sword."
So he gave him the sword, and the prince began his story:
"Once upon a time there lived a wealthy
merchant who had a pet dog. He was suddenly reduced to poverty, and had
to part with his dog. He got a loan of five thousand rupees from a
brother merchant, leaving the dog as a pledge, and with the money began
business again. Not long after this the other merchant's shop was
broken into by thieves and completely sacked. There was hardly ten
rupees' worth left in the place. The faithful dog, however, knew what
was going on, and went and followed the thieves, and saw where they
deposited the things, and then returned.
"In the morning there was great weeping and
lamentation in the merchant's house when it was known what had
happened. The merchant himself nearly went mad. Meanwhile the dog kept
on running to the door, and pulling at his master's shirt and paijamas,
as though wishing him to go outside. At last a friend suggested that,
perhaps, the dog knew something of the whereabouts of the things, and
advised the merchant to follow its leadings. The merchant consented,
and went after the dog right up to the very place where the thieves had
hidden the goods. Here the animal scraped and barked, and showed in
various ways that the things were underneath. So the merchant and his
friends dug about the place, and soon came upon all the stolen
property. Nothing was missing. There was everything just as the thieves
had taken them.
"The merchant was very glad. On returning to
his house, he at once sent the dog back to its old master with a letter
rolled under the collar, wherein he had written about the sagacity of
the beast, and begged his friend to forget the loan and to accept
another five thousand rupees as a present. When this merchant saw his
dog coming back again, he thought, 'Alas! my friend is wanting the
money. How can I pay him? I have not had sufficient time to recover
myself from my recent losses. I will slay the dog ere he reaches the
threshold, and say that another must have slain it. Thus there will be
an end of my debt.'
"No dog, no loan. Accordingly he ran out and
killed the poor dog, when the letter fell out of its collar. The
merchant picked it up and read it. How great was his grief and
disappointment when he knew the facts of the case!
"Beware," continued the prince, "lest you do that which afterwards you would give your life not to have done."
By the time the prince had concluded this story it was nearly morning, and he went away, after rewarding the man.
The prince then visited the country belonging
to his brother-in-law. He disguised himself as a jogi, and sitting down
by a tree near the palace, pretended to be absorbed in worship. News
of the man and of his wonderful piety reached the ears of the king. He
felt interested in him, as his wife was very ill; and he had sought for
hakims to cure her, but in vain. He thought that, perhaps, this holy
man could do something for her. So he sent to him. But the jogi refused
to tread the halls of a king, saying that his dwelling was the open
air, and that if his Majesty wished to see him he must come himself and
bring his wife to the place. Then the king took his wife and brought
her to the jogi. The holy man bade her prostrate herself before him,
and when she had remained in this position for about three hours, he
told her to rise and go, for she was cured.
In the evening there was great consternation
in the palace, because the queen had lost her pearl rosary, and nobody
knew anything about it. At length some one went to the jogi, and found
it on the ground by the place where the queen had prostrated herself.
When the king heard this he was very angry, and ordered the jogi to be
executed. This stern order, however, was not carried out, as the prince
bribed the men and escaped from the country. But he knew that the
second bit of advice was true.
Clad in his own clothes, the prince was
walking along one day when he saw a potter crying and laughing
alternately with his wife and children. "O fool," said he, "what is the
matter? If you laugh, why do you weep? If you weep, why do you laugh?"
"Do not bother me," said the potter. "What does it matter to you?"
"Pardon me," said the prince, "but I should like to know the reason."
"The reason is this, then," said the potter.
"The king of this country has a daughter whom he is obliged to marry
every day, because all her husbands die the first night of their stay
with her. Nearly all the young men of the place have thus perished, and
our son will be called on soon. We laugh at the absurdity of the
thing—a potter's son marrying a princess, and we cry at the terrible
consequence of the marriage. What can we do?"
"Truly a matter for laughing and weeping. But
weep no more," said the prince. "I will exchange places with your son,
and will be married to the princess instead of him. Only give me
suitable garments, and prepare me for the occasion."
So the potter gave him beautiful raiment and
ornaments, and the prince went to the palace. At night he was conducted
to the apartment of the princess. "Dread hour!" thought he; "am I to
die like the scores of young men before me?" He clenched his sword with
firm grip, and lay down on his bed, intending to keep awake all the
night and see what would happen. In the middle of the night he saw two
Shahmars come out from the nostrils of the princess. They stole over
towards him, intending to kill him, like the others who had been before
him: but he was ready for them. He laid hold of his sword, and when
the snakes reached his bed he struck at them and killed them. In the
morning the king came as usual to inquire, and was surprised to hear
his daughter and the prince talking gaily together. "Surely," said he,
"this man must be her husband, as he only can live with her."
"Where do you come from? Who are you?" asked the king, entering the room.
"O king!" replied the prince, "I am the son of a king who rules over such-and-such a country."
When he heard this the king was very glad, and
bade the prince to abide in his palace, and appointed him his
successor to the throne. The prince remained at the palace for more
than a year, and then asked permission to visit his own country, which
was granted. The king gave him elephants, horses, jewels, and abundance
of money for the expenses of the way and as presents for his father,
and the prince started.
On the way he had to pass through the country
belonging to his brother- in-law, whom we have already mentioned.
Report of his arrival reached the ears of the king, who came with
rope-tied hands and haltered neck to do him homage. He most humbly
begged him to stay at his palace, and to accept what little hospitality
could be provided. While the prince was staying at the palace he saw
his sister, who greeted him with smiles and kisses. On leaving he told
her how she and her husband had treated him at his first visit, and how
he had escaped; and then gave them two elephants, two beautiful
horses, fifteen soldiers, and ten lacs rupees' worth of jewels.
Afterwards he went to his own home, and
informed his mother and father of his arrival. Alas! his parents had
both become blind from weeping about the loss of their son. "Let him
come in," said the king, "and put his hands upon our eyes, and we shall
see again." So the prince entered, and was most affectionately greeted
by his old parents; and he laid his hands on their eyes, and they saw
again.
Then the prince told his father all that had
happened to him, and how he had been saved several times by attending
to the advice that he had purchased from the Brahmani. Whereupon the
king expressed his sorrow for having sent him away, and all was joy and
peace again.
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