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Kacchapa Jātaka (No. 178, 215, 273)
1. Kacchapa Jātaka (No. 178). The story of a tortoise who would not
leave the lake where he lived even though all the other tortoises, knowing there
would be a drought, swam in time to the neighbouring river. When the drought
came, he buried himself in a hole. There he was dug up by the Bodhisatta who was
digging for clay, having been born as a potter. The tortoise's shell was cracked
by the potter's spade and he died, having uttered two verses on the folly of
clinging too much to things. The Bodhisatta took his body to the village and
preached to the villagers.
The story was told to a young man of Sāvatthi who, when the plague broke out
in his house, listened to his parents' advice and escaped through a hole in the
wall. When the danger was past he returned and rescued the treasure hoarded in
the house and, one day, visited the Buddha with many gifts.
Ananda is identified with the tortoise of the story. J. ii.79-81.

2. Kacchapa Jātaka (No. 215). The story of a tortoise who became
friendly with two geese living in the Cittakūta mountain. One day the geese
invited the tortoise to their abode, and when he agreed they made him hold a
stick between his teeth, and seizing the two ends flew away with him. The
children of the village, seeing them, started shouting, and the tortoise, being
of a talkative nature, opened his mouth to reprimand them and fell near the
palace of the king of Benares, crushing himself to death. The Bodhisatta, who
was the king's minister, seized the opportunity for admonishing his master, who
was an inveterate talker, on the virtues of silence.
The tortoise is identified with Kokālika, in reference to whom the story was
related (J.ii.175-8; repeated also in DhA.iv.91f).
For details see the Mahātakkāri Jātaka.
3. Kacchapa Jātaka (No. 273). The story of how a monkey insulted a
tortoise by introducing his private parts into the tortoise as the latter lay
basking in the sun with his mouth open. The tortoise caught hold of the monkey
and refused to release him. The monkey went for help, and the Bodhisatta, who
was an ascetic in a hermitage near by, saw the monkey carrying the tortoise. The
Bodhisatta persuaded the tortoise to release the monkey.
The story was related in reference to the quarrelsome ministers of the king
of Kosala. J. ii.359-61.

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