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Vaddhakisūkara Jātaka (No. 283)
A carpenter of a village near Benares was once wandering in the forest, and
having found a young boar in a pit, took him home and brought him up. The boar
was well mannered and helped the carpenter in his work, and so he came to be
called Vaddhakisūkara ("Carpenter boar"). When he grew up, the carpenter took
him back to the forest, and there he came across some boars who lived in mortal
fear of a tiger. The young boar drilled his army of boars, arranged them in
battle array, and awaited the tiger. When he arrived, the boars, under their
leader's instructions, mimicked the tiger in all he did. The tiger, thereupon,
sought the advice of a false ascetic who shared his prey, and, following his
counsel, made a leap at the boar leader and fell into a pit which had been dug
for him. There the boars attacked him and ate him, and those who were unable to
get any of the flesh sniffed at the others' mouths to see how "tiger" tasted.
Then they set off after the false ascetic, and when he climbed a fig tree they
dug it up and it fell to the ground. The man was torn to pieces and his body
licked clean. The boars then placed their leader on the tree trunk, consecrated
him king with water, which they fetched in the dead man's skull, and made a
young sow his consort. (This is how kings came to be consecrated with water from
shells and seated on a throne of fig planks.) The Bodhisatta who was then a tree
sprite sang the boar's praises.
The story was told in reference to
Dhanuggahatissa (q.v.), who was responsible for
Pasenadi's victory over Ajātasattu.
J.ii.403ff.

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