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Kapota Jātaka (No.42, 375)
1. Kapota Jātaka (No.42). Once the
Bodhisatta was born as a pigeon and lived in a straw basket hung in the kitchen
of the setthi of Benares. A crow, sniffing the savour of the food being cooked
in the kitchen and longing to taste it, struck up a friendship with the pigeon
in order to gain admission. In the evening, having searched for his food in the
pigeon's company, he accompanied him home, and the setthi's cook, on seeing him,
provided a basket for him. One day, seeing some fish being prepared, the crow
feigned illness and stayed behind in his basket, in spite of the warnings of the
pigeon, who suspected his real reason. The cook caught the crow stealing a piece
of fish and, in order to punish him, plucked his feathers and soused him in a
pickle of ginger and salt and cumin mixed with sour butter-milk. The pigeon, on
his return, found him in this state and, having learnt his story, flew away, not
wishing to live there any more. The crow died and was flung on the dust heap.

The story was related in reference to a
greedy monk who was identified with the crow. J. i.241ff
2. Kapota Jātaka (No.375). The same as
above, except for a few details. When the theft was discovered, the cook made a
mixture of moist ginger and white mustard, pounded with a rotten date, and after
wounding the crow with a potsherd, rubbed the stuff into the wound and fastened
the potsherd round its neck. J. iii.224ff

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