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Dhajavihetha Jātaka (No.391)
A wizard was wont to come at midnight in order to corrupt the queen of
Benares. She complained to the king and, at his
request, she set the mark on her hand with vermillion on his back. By day the
man was an ascetic, and when he found that he was discovered he fled through the
air. The king thereupon suspected all ascetics and ordered them all to leave the
kingdom. The king became a heretic. The Bodhisatta who was born as Sakka, seeing
all this, came to Benares with an old Pacceka Buddha and stood close to the
palace, showing him great reverence. When the king came out Sakka revealed his
identity, telling him that even the ruler of the gods honoured pious men. The
king saw his error and mended his ways.
The origin of the story is given in the
Mahākanha Jātaka. The king is
identified with Ananda. J. iii.303-7.
More or less the same story is given at greater length and with several
variations in detail in both the
Cullahamsa and the Mahāhamsa Jātakas.

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