1. Mahākapi Jātaka (No. 407)
The Bodhisatta was once a monkey, leader of eighty
thousand. In the grove where they lived was a mango tree (some say a banyan)
growing on a river bank bearing fruit of divine flavour, and the monkeys were
always careful to let no fruit drop into the river. But one day a fruit, which
bad been hidden by an ants' nest, fell into the water, and was picked up at
Benares, where the king was bathing. The king tasted it, and being seized with a
desire to eat more, had many rafts made, and ascended the river with a company
of foresters. They found the tree, and the king, having eaten his fill, lay down
at the foot. At midnight the Bodhisatta came with his retinue and started eating
the mangoes. The king was disturbed, and gave orders to his archers that the
wood should be surrounded and all the monkeys shot at daybreak. But the
Bodhisatta was a real leader; he ascended a straight-growing branch and, with
one leap, reached the river bank. He then marked the distance, and having cut
off a bamboo shoot of the required length, fastened one end to a tree on the
bank and the other end round his waist. On leaping back, he found he had not
allowed for the length which went round his waist, but grasping a branch firmly
with both hands, he signalled to his followers to cross the bridge so formed.
The eighty thousand monkeys thus escaped; but the monkey who was
Devadatta,
coming last, saw a chance of injuring the Bodhisatta, and taking a spring into
the air, fell on the Bodhisatta's back, breaking it, There the Bodhisatta hung
in agony, and the king who had seen all this caused him to be brought down and
covered with a yellow robe and ministered to. But nothing could be done, and the
Bodhisatta died after having admonished the king. A funeral pyre was made with
one hundred wagon loads of timber, and the dead monkey was paid all the honours
due to a king. A shrine was built on the spot where the cremation took place,
while the skull was inlaid with gold and taken to Benares, where a great feast
was held in its honour for seven days. Afterwards it was enshrined and offerings
were made to it.



The story was told concerning good works towards one's
relations, as narrated in the introduction to the Bhaddasāla Jātaka. Ananda is
identified with the king. J. iii.369-75; cf. Jātakamālā,
No. 27; the story is sculptured in the stūpa of Bharhut, Cunningham,
pl.xxxiii.4.
The Jātaka is also called the Rājovāda Jātaka. It is
probably this story which is said to have greatly impressed Ilanāga when he
heard it from the Thera Mahāpaduma, who lived in Tulādhāra. Mhv.xxxv.30.
2. Mahākapi Jātaka (No. 516)
The Bodhisatta was once a monkey, and one day, in the
forest, he came across a man who had fallen into a pit while looking for his
oxen and had lain there starving for ten days. The Bodhisatta pulled him out and
then lay down to sleep. But the man, very hungry, and wishing to eat him, struck
his head with a stone, grievously wounding him. The monkey at once climbed a
tree in order to escape, but realizing that the man would be unable to find his
way out of the forest, he jumped from tree to tree (in spite of his intense
pain) and showed him the way out. The man became a leper, and wandered about for
seven years till he came to the Migācira Park in Benares and told his story to
the king. At the end of his recital the earth opened and he was swallowed up in
Avīci.
The story was related in reference to
Devadatta's attempt
to kill the Buddha by hurling a stone upon him. The leper was Devadatta. J. v.67
74; cf. Jātakamāla, No. 24.
The story is also called the Vevatiyakapi Jātaka.

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