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1. Amba Jātaka (No. 124).During a very severe drought a hermit,
living in the Himālaya at the head of five hundred ascetics, provided water for
the animals, using the hollowed trunk of a tree as trough. In gratitude the
animals brought him various fruits, enough for himself and his five hundred
companions. The story is related regarding a brother who was very zealous in his
duties, doing everything well and wholeheartedly. Because of his great goodness
the people fed regularly every day five hundred of the Brethren. J. i.449-51.
2. Amba Jātaka (No. 474). The story of a brahmin youth who learnt a
charm from a wise Candāla. The charm had the power of making lovely and fragrant
mangoes grow out of season. The youth exhibited his skill before the king, but
when asked the name of his teacher he lied and said he had been taught in
Takkasilā. Immediately the charm escaped his memory and all his power deserted
him. At the king's suggestion he went back to the teacher to ask his forgiveness
and to learn the charm anew, but the teacher would have none of him and the
youth wandered away into the forest and died there.
The story is told in reference to Devadatta
who had repudiated the Buddha as his teacher and as a result was born in
Avīci (J.iv.200-7).
The youth was a former birth of Devadatta.

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