-
Ruru(miga) Jātaka (No. 482)
Once, in Benares, there lived Mahādhanaka, son of a rich man. His parents had
taught him nothing, and after their death he squandered all their wealth and
fell into debt. Unable to escape his creditors, he summoned them and took them
to the banks of the Ganges, promising to show them buried treasure. Arrived
there, he jumped into the river. He lamented aloud as he was being carried away
by the stream. The Bodhisatta was then a golden hued deer living on the banks of
the river, and, hearing the man's wailing of anguish, he swam into the stream
and saved him. After having ministered to him, the deer set him on the road to
Benares and asked him to tell no one of the existence of the Bodhisatta.

The day the man reached Benares, proclamation was being made that the Queen
Consort, Khemā, having dreamed of a golden deer preaching to her, longed for the
dream to come true. Mahādhanaka offered to take the king to such a deer and a
hunt was organized. When the Bodhisatta saw the king with his retinue, he went
up to the king and told him the story of Mahādhanaka. The king denounced the
traitor and gave the Bodhisatta a boon that henceforth all creatures should be
free from danger. Afterwards the Bodhisatta was taken to the city, where he saw
the queen. Flocks of deer, now free from fear, devoured men's crops; but the
king would not go against his promise and the Bodhisatta begged his herds to
desist from doing damage.

The story was told in reference to Devadatta's ingratitude and wickedness.
Devadatta was Mahādhanaka and Ananda the king. J. iv.255 63; the story is
included in the Jātakamālā (No. 26).

|