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Vīnāthūna Jātaka (No. 232)
The Bodhisatta was once a rich merchant, and a marriage
was arranged between his son and the daughter of a Benares merchant. In her
parents' house, the girl saw honour being offered to a bull, and seeing a
hunchback in the street on the day of her marriage, she thought him worthy of
great honour (because of his hunch) and went away with him in disguise, carrying
her jewellery. The Bodhisatta's friends saw her, and persuading her of her
folly, took her back home.
The story was told in reference to a rich girl of Sāvatthi
who went away with a hunchback in similar circumstances. The girls of both
stories were the same. J. ii.224f.

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