The Ox Who Won The Forfeit [Jataka Tales]
LONG ago a man owned a very strong Ox. The owner was so proud of his Ox, that he boasted to every man he met about how strong his Ox was.
One day the owner
went into a village, and said to the men there: "I will pay a forfeit of a
thousand pieces of silver if my strong Ox cannot draw a line of one hundred
wagons."
The men laughed,
and said: "Very well; bring your Ox, and we will tie a hundred wagons in a
line and see your Ox draw them along."
So the man brought
his Ox into the village. A crowd gathered to see the sight. The hundred carts
were in line, and the strong Ox was yoked to the first wagon.
Then the owner
whipped his Ox, and said: "Get up, you wretch! Get along, you
rascal!"
But the Ox had
never been talked to in that way, and he stood still. Neither the blows nor the
hard names could make him move.
At last the poor
man paid his forfeit, and went sadly home. There he threw himself on his bed
and cried: "Why did that strong Ox act so? Many a time he has moved heavier
loads easily. Why did he shame me before all those people?"
At last he got up
and went about his work. When he went to feed the Ox that night, the Ox turned
to him and said: "Why did you whip me to-day? You never whipped me before.
Why did you call me 'wretch' and 'rascal'? You never called me hard names
before."
Then the man said:
"I will never treat you badly again. I am sorry I whipped you and called
you names. I will never do so any more. Forgive me."
"Very
well," said the Ox. "To-morrow I will go into the village and draw
the one hundred carts for you. You have always been a kind master until to-day.
To-morrow you shall gain what you lost."
The next morning
the owner fed the Ox well, and hung a garland of flowers about his neck. When
they went into the village the men laughed at the man again.
They said:
"Did you come back to lose more money?"
"To-day I will
pay a forfeit of two thousand pieces of silver if my Ox is not strong enough to
pull the one hundred carts," said the owner.
So again the carts
were placed in a line, and the Ox was yoked to the first. A crowd came to watch
again. The owner said: "Good Ox, show how strong you are! You fine, fine
creature!" And he patted his neck and stroked his sides.
At once the Ox
pulled with all his strength. The carts moved on until the last cart stood
where the first had been.
Then the crowd
shouted, and they paid back the forfeit the man had lost, saying: "Your Ox
is the strongest Ox we ever saw."
And the Ox and the man went home, happy.