|
1. Sīlavīmamsa Jātaka (No. 330). The Bodhisatta was
once chaplain of the king of Benares, later becoming an ascetic. One day be saw
a hawk, attacked by other birds, drop a piece of meat he had stolen. On another
day he saw a slave girl, Pingalā, waiting for her lover until late into the
night, and, when he did not come, she fell asleep. On a third occasion he saw a
hermit meditating. Drawing a moral from these incidents, he lived the hermit
life and was reborn in the Brahma world.
The story was told in reference to a brahmin who was ever
proving his virtue. J. iii.100-102.
2. Sīlavīmamsa Jātaka (No. 362). The Bodhisatta was
chaplain to the king of Benares. He was both learned and good; but wishing to
test which quality brought him greater honour, he started stealing money from
the treasurer. On the third occasion he was arrested and led before the king. He
then explained his behaviour to the king, and, having discovered that virtue was
the more highly esteemed, he became an ascetic with the king's leave.
The story was told in reference to a brahmin of Sāvatthi
who carried out the same test. J. iii.193-5.

|