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Contains several parables which the
Bodhisatta, as counsellor to Brahmadatta, king of Benares, employed for the
king's instruction. Like the peak of a roof which falls unless tightly held by
the rafters, is a king who must be supported by his subjects who have been won
over by his righteousness. As a citron must be eaten without its peel, so must
taxes be gathered without violence. Like the lotus, unstained by the water in
which it grows, is the virtuous man untainted by the world.
The king is identified with Ananda
(J.iii.317ff). The occasion for the story is given in the Tesakuna Jātaka.

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