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The Bodhisatta was once born as Brahmadatta, king of
Benares. He had a gardener named Sańjaya. A vātamiga used to visit the royal
park, and the king asked Sańjaya to catch it. Sańjaya put honey on the grass
where the animal fed, and, in due course, the animal came to eat out of his
hand. He was thus able to entice it right into the palace, where he shut the
door on it. The king marvelled that a vātamiga, who was so shy that if it once
saw a man it would not visit the same place for a week after, should allow
itself to be caught by greed.
The story was related in reference to Cullapindapātika
Tissa (q.v.), who was enticed back to the lay life by a slave girl. Sańjaya is
identified with the slave and the vātamiga with the monk. J. i.156ff.
According to the Dhammapada Commentary (DhA.iv.199),
however, it was with reference to Sundarasamudda that the story was told.

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