The Sandy Road [Jataka Tales]
ONCE upon a time a merchant, with his goods packed in many carts, came to a desert. He was on his way to the country on the other side of the desert.
The sun shone on
the fine sand, making it as hot as the top of a stove. No man could walk on it
in the sunlight. But at night, after the sun went down, the sand cooled, and
then men could travel upon it.
So the merchant
waited until after dark, and then set out. Besides the goods that he was going
to sell, he took jars of water and of rice, and firewood, so that the rice
could be cooked.
All night long he
and his men rode on and on. One man was the pilot. He rode first, for he knew
the stars, and by them he guided the drivers.
At daybreak they
stopped and camped. They unyoked the oxen, and fed them. They built fires and
cooked the rice. Then they spread a great awning over all the carts and the
oxen, and the men lay down under it to rest until sunset.
In the early
evening, they again built fires and cooked rice. After supper, they folded the
awning and put it away. They yoked the oxen, and, as soon as the sand was cool,
they started again on their journey across the desert.
Night after night
they traveled in this way, resting during the heat of the day. At last one
morning the pilot said: "In one more night we shall get out of the
sand." The men were glad to hear this, for they were tired.
After supper that
night the merchant said: "You may as well throw away nearly all the water
and the firewood. By to-morrow we shall be in the city. Yoke the oxen and start
on."
Then the pilot took
his place at the head of the line. But, instead of sitting up and guiding the
drivers, he lay down in the wagon on the cushions. Soon he was fast asleep,
because he had not slept for many nights, and the light had been so strong in
the daytime that he had not slept well then.
All night long the
oxen went on. Near daybreak, the pilot awoke and looked at the last stars
fading in the light. "Halt!" he called to the drivers. "We are
in the same place where we were yesterday. The oxen must have turned about
while I slept."
They unyoked the
oxen, but there was no water for them to drink. They had thrown away the water
that was left the night before. So the men spread the awning over the carts,
and the oxen lay down, tired and thirsty. The men, too, lay down saying,
"The wood and water are gone—we are lost."
But the merchant
said to himself, "This is no time for me to sleep. I must find water. The
oxen cannot go on if they do not have water to drink. The men must have water.
They cannot cook the rice unless they have water. If I give up, we shall all be
lost!"
On and on he
walked, keeping close watch of the ground. At last he saw a tuft of grass.
"There must be water somewhere below, or that grass would not be
there," he said.
He ran back,
shouting to the men, "Bring the spade and the hammer!"
They jumped up, and
ran with him to the spot where the grass grew. They began to dig, and by and by
they struck a rock and could dig no further. Then the merchant jumped down into
the hole they had dug, and put his ear to the rock. "I hear water running
under this rock," he called to them. "We must not give up!" Then
the merchant came up out of the hole and said to a serving-lad: "My boy,
if you give up we are lost! You go down and try!"
The boy stood up
straight and raised the hammer high above his head and hit the rock as hard as
ever he could. He would not give in. They must be saved. Down came the hammer.
This time the rock broke. And the boy had hardly time to get out of the well
before it was full of cool water. The men drank as if they never could get
enough, and then they watered the oxen, and bathed.
Then they split up
their extra yokes and axles, and built a fire, and cooked their rice. Feeling
better, they rested through the day. They set up a flag on the well for
travelers to see.
At sundown, they started on again, and the next morning reached the city, where they sold the goods, and then returned home.